登陆注册
37803300000014

第14章 #Chapter IV The Garden of the God(1)

Diana Duke seemed inexplicably irritated at the abrupt entrance and utterance of the other girl.

"Well," she said shortly, "I suppose Miss Gray can decline him if she doesn't want to marry him."

"But she DOES want to marry him!" cried Rosamund in exasperation.

"She's a wild, wicked fool, and I won't be parted from her."

"Perhaps," said Diana icily, "but I really don't see what we can do."

"But the man's balmy, Diana," reasoned her friend angrily.

"I can't let my nice governess marry a man that's balmy!

You or somebody MUST stop it!--Mr. Inglewood, you're a man; go and tell them they simply can't."

"Unfortunately, it seems to me they simply can," said Inglewood, with a depressed air. "I have far less right of intervention than Miss Duke, besides having, of course, far less moral force than she."

"You haven't either of you got much," cried Rosamund, the last stays of her formidable temper giving way;

"I think I'll go somewhere else for a little sense and pluck.

I think I know some one who will help me more than you do, at any rate... he's a cantankerous beast, but he's a man, and has a mind, and knows it..." And she flung out into the garden, with cheeks aflame, and the parasol whirling like a Catherine wheel.

She found Michael Moon standing under the garden tree, looking over the hedge; hunched like a bird of prey, with his large pipe hanging down his long blue chin. The very hardness of his expression pleased her, after the nonsense of the new engagement and the shilly-shallying of her other friends.

"I am sorry I was cross, Mr. Moon," she said frankly. "I hated you for being a cynic; but I've been well punished, for I want a cynic just now. I've had my fill of sentiment--I'm fed up with it.

The world's gone mad, Mr. Moon--all except the cynics, I think.

That maniac Smith wants to marry my old friend Mary, and she-- and she--doesn't seem to mind."

Seeing his attentive face still undisturbedly smoking, she added smartly, "I'm not joking; that's Mr. Smith's cab outside. He swears he'll take her off now to his aunt's, and go for a special licence.

Do give me some practical advice, Mr. Moon."

Mr. Moon took his pipe out of his mouth, held it in his hand for an instant reflectively, and then tossed it to the other side of the garden. "My practical advice to you is this," he said:

"Let him go for his special licence, and ask him to get another one for you and me."

"Is that one of your jokes?" asked the young lady.

"Do say what you really mean."

"I mean that Innocent Smith is a man of business," said Moon with ponderous precision--"a plain, practical man: a man of affairs; a man of facts and the daylight.

He has let down twenty ton of good building bricks suddenly on my head, and I am glad to say they have woken me up.

We went to sleep a little while ago on this very lawn, in this very sunlight. We have had a little nap for five years or so, but now we're going to be married, Rosamund, and I can't see why that cab..."

"Really," said Rosamund stoutly, "I don't know what you mean."

"What a lie! cried Michael, advancing on her with brightening eyes.

"I'm all for lies in an ordinary way; but don't you see that to-night they won't do? We've wandered into a world of facts, old girl.

That grass growing, and that sun going down, and that cab at the door, are facts. You used to torment and excuse yourself by saying I was after your money, and didn't really love you. But if I stood here now and told you I didn't love you--you wouldn't believe me: for truth is in this garden to-night."

"Really, Mr. Moon..." said Rosamund, rather more faintly.

He kept two big blue magnetic eyes fixed on her face.

"Is my name Moon?" he asked. "Is your name Hunt? On my honour, they sound to me as quaint and as distant as Red Indian names.

It's as if your name was `Swim' and my name was `Sunrise.' But our real names are Husband and Wife, as they were when we fell asleep."

"It is no good," said Rosamund, with real tears in her eyes;

"one can never go back."

"I can go where I damn please," said Michael, "and I can carry you on my shoulder."

"But really, Michael, really, you must stop and think!" cried the girl earnestly. "You could carry me off my feet, I dare say, soul and body, but it may be bitter bad business for all that.

These things done in that romantic rush, like Mr. Smith's, they-- they do attract women, I don't deny it. As you say, we're all telling the truth to-night. They've attracted poor Mary, for one.

They attract me, Michael. But the cold fact remains: imprudent marriages do lead to long unhappiness and disappointment-- you've got used to your drinks and things--I shan't be pretty much longer--"

"Imprudent marriages!" roared Michael. "And pray where in earth or heaven are there any prudent marriages? Might as well talk about prudent suicides. You and I have dawdled round each other long enough, and are we any safer than Smith and Mary Gray, who met last night? You never know a husband till you marry him.

Unhappy! of course you'll be unhappy. Who the devil are you that you shouldn't be unhappy, like the mother that bore you?

Disappointed! of course we'll be disappointed. I, for one, don't expect till I die to be so good a man as I am at this minute-- a tower with all the trumpets shouting."

"You see all this," said Rosamund, with a grand sincerity in her solid face, "and do you really want to marry me?"

"My darling, what else is there to do?" reasoned the Irishman. "What other occupation is there for an active man on this earth, except to marry you? What's the alternative to marriage, barring sleep?

It's not liberty, Rosamund. Unless you marry God, as our nuns do in Ireland, you must marry Man--that is Me. The only third thing is to marry yourself-- yourself, yourself, yourself--the only companion that is never satisfied-- and never satisfactory."

"Michael," said Miss Hunt, in a very soft voice, "if you won't talk so much, I'll marry you."

"It's no time for talking," cried Michael Moon; singing is the only thing.

Can't you find that mandoline of yours, Rosamund?"

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 每天都有新故事

    每天都有新故事

    小柒是个28岁的单身优秀女青年,生活在北京。她不怎么求上进,有份稳当的工作。谈了2次失败的恋爱,现在全身心的爱都投放在她的爱狗“表格”身上。一人一狗,还有2个不靠谱的闺蜜、十分开心幸福。但“表格”得了怪病,让小柒的生活天翻地覆。。。
  • 回到清朝当驸马

    回到清朝当驸马

    穿越到清朝,大小姐,小宫女,公主……手到擒来……即便是霸气四射的皇帝,都忍不住要夸一句:“卿真乃吾大清之福啊!”
  • 王子历险奇遇记

    王子历险奇遇记

    乔长老近日不问旁事,整天为一个异界闯入的落难精灵费尽心思。精灵已经身体受损,蜕化成精灵蛋才得以护住仅剩的一点精气,需要用地球上极其稀缺的元素才可以修复复原,而集齐这些元素以目前的装备和人员配备,至少得筹备一年半载的。若是换做他人,恐怕早就将这只蛋做了汤羹,毕竟对主食是金属和木块的修真者来说,精灵蛋是难得的美味佳肴。
  • 夜终

    夜终

    无数年来的历史,没有人能一清二楚。所谓的谜团就是披在真相上的层层面纱,活在迷中的生命又该怎样揭开呢?
  • 无汗v

    无汗v

    天赋不够,系统来凑!洛尘机缘巧合之下穿越异界,绑定一键升级系统。手指轻轻一点,境界瞬间突破。功法武技不用愁,一键直达满级!资质奇差不用愁,一键瞬间提升!丹道阵道武道不能兼顾?洛尘表示老子全都要!……手握系统,脚踏诸天。开挂一时爽,一直开挂一直爽!
  • 腹黑男神遇上呆萌女孩

    腹黑男神遇上呆萌女孩

    她是林慕安,一位在校大学生,但真实身份是千金小姐,他是苏泽熙,A市最大的人物。他将万千宠爱都给了林慕安。“别以为这样对我好我就爱上你”某女不吃这套。“那我爱上了你行吗..”
  • 本府有佳人

    本府有佳人

    山有木兮卿有意,月有影兮君不离!情动之初!她是尊贵的左丞千金,偏偏于几多青睐中独抚他眉眼,喃喃笑语:“本府有佳人,何须觅俗粉?”情深不离时!他已再非死士影卫之身,不惧皇权于万人中央揽她入怀,坦然笑语:“本府有佳人,此心无闲隙!”
  • 嫡权斗

    嫡权斗

    为什么只有我一个人注意到了这个世界的不公——男尊女卑,可笑却又可悲,若我是个男子,我的命运是不是不会变成如此,若我们没有这种封建思想,我是不是不会手染鲜血?若亲人不背叛我,我是不是不会这么心狠···其实本文就是讲了一个嫡女经历了种种事情然后成为孤女,再经历种种事情,成为宰相义女,接着再经历种种事情成为嫔妃,再经历种种事情成为女皇,再经历·····(本人文笔渣到一种人神共怒的境界,从这个简介就可以看出。发誓坚决无cp,女主性情阴晴不定)
  • 都市武皇

    都市武皇

    林风从‘尚武’的异世大陆穿越到‘末武’的地球世界,怀揣着一身武艺和一颗骚动的心,开始了在地球世界的新生活......笑看风起云涌,征服各色美女,御姐萝莉、女侠及女飞贼!
  • 五爷,咱们只婚不爱

    五爷,咱们只婚不爱

    南翼云的婚姻协议书中明确写着,跟时念只婚不爱,一切只为交易而结婚。然而,一口咬定自己不会爱上时念的南翼云,却突然间变了卦,时时刻刻都想着如何真正的持证上岗。南翼云:“时小念,隔壁老王家的媳妇怀二胎了。”南翼云:“时小念,跟我一样大的兄弟孩子已经五岁了。”南翼云:“时小念,咱们是不是应该……”时念斜着眼睛:“南翼云你想说什么?”南翼云:“咱们结婚那么久,人家孩子都打酱油了……”时念:“……”后来,南翼云的房子归了时念,车子归了时念,存款也归了时念。只是出门的时候,她身边总是多了一个抱着奶娃的南翼云。