登陆注册
36833900000078

第78章

"It will happen quickly," she said. "There is that little cloud in the east like a man's hand today, and rather like that mailed fist which our sweet peaceful friend in Germany is so fond of talking about. But it will spread over the sky, I tell you, like some tropical storm. France is unready, Russia is unready; only Germany and her marionette, Austria, the strings of which she pulls, is ready.""Go on prophesying," said Michael.

"I wish I could. Ever since that Sarajevo murder I have thought of nothing else day and night. But how events will develop then Ican't imagine. What will England do? Who knows? I only know what Germany thinks she will do, and that is, stand aside because she can't stir, with this Irish mill-stone round her neck. If Germany thought otherwise, she is perfectly capable of sending a dozen submarines over to our naval manoeuvres and torpedoing our battleships right and left."Michael laughed outright at this.

"While a fleet of Zeppelins hovers over London, and drops bombs on the War Office and the Admiralty," he suggested.

But Aunt Barbara was not in the least diverted by this.

"And if England stands aside," she said, "Der Tag will only dawn a little later, when Germany has settled with France and Russia. We shall live to see Der Tag, Michael, unless we are run over by motor-buses, and pray God we shall see it soon, for the sooner the better. Your adorable Falbes, now, Sylvia and Hermann. What do they think of it?""Hermann was certainly rather--rather upset when he read of the Sarajevo murders," he said. "But he pins his faith on the German Emperor, whom he alluded to as a fire-engine which would put out any conflagration."Aunt Barbara rose in violent incredulity.

"Pish and bosh!" she remarked. "If he had alluded to him as an incendiary bomb, there would have been more sense in his simile.""Anyhow, he and Sylvia are planning a musical tour in Germany in the autumn," said Michael.

"'It's a long, long way to Tipperary,'" remarked Aunt Barbara enigmatically.

"Why Tipperary?" asked Michael.

"Oh, it's just a song I heard at a music-hall the other night.

There's a jolly catchy tune to it, which has rung in my head ever since. That's the sort of music I like, something you can carry away with you. And your music, Michael?""Rather in abeyance. There are--other things to think about."Aunt Barbara got up.

"Ah, tell me more about them," she said. "I want to get this nightmare out of my head. Sylvia, now. Sylvia is a good cure for the nightmare. Is she kind as she is fair, Michael?"Michael was silent for a moment. Then he turned a quiet, radiant face to her.

"I can't talk about it," he said. "I can't get accustomed to the wonder of it.""That will do. That's a completely satisfactory account. But go on."Michael laughed.

"How can I?" he asked. "There's no end and no beginning. I can't 'go on' as you order me about a thing like that. There is Sylvia;there is me."

"I must be content with that, then," she said, smiling.

"We are," said Michael.

Lady Barbara waited a moment without speaking.

"And your mother?" she asked.

He shook his head.

"She still refuses to see me," he said. "She still thinks it was Iwho made the plot to take her away and shut her up. She is often angry with me, poor darling, but--but you see it isn't she who is angry: it's just her malady.""Yes, my dear," said Lady Barbara. "I am so glad you see it like that.""How else could I see it? It was my real mother whom I began to know last Christmas, and whom I was with in town for the three months that followed. That's how I think of her: I can't think of her as anything else.""And how is she otherwise?"

Again he shook his head.

"She is wretched, though they say that all she feels is dim and veiled, that we mustn't think of her as actually unhappy.

Sometimes there are good days, when she takes a certain pleasure in her walks and in looking after a little plot of ground where she gardens. And, thank God, that sudden outburst when she tried to kill me seems to have entirely passed from her mind. They don't think she remembers it at all. But then the good days are rare, and are growing rarer, and often now she sits doing nothing at all but crying."Aunt Barbara laid her hand on him.

"Oh, my dear," she said.

Michael paused for a moment, his brown eyes shining.

"If only she could come back just for a little to what she was in January," he said. "She was happier then, I think, than she ever was before. I can't help wondering if anyhow I could have prolonged those days, by giving myself up to her more completely.""My dear, you needn't wonder about that," said Aunt Barbara. "Sir James told me that it was your love and nothing else at all that gave her those days."Michael's lips quivered.

"I can't tell you what they were to me," he said, "for she and Ifound each other then, and we both felt we had missed each other so much and so long. She was happy then, and I, too. And now everything has been taken from her, and still, in spite of that, my cup is full to overflowing.""That's how she would have it, Michael," said Barbara.

"Yes, I know that. I remind myself of that."Again he paused.

"They don't think she will live very long," he said. "She is getting physically much weaker. But during this last week or two she has been less unhappy, they think. They say some new change may come any time: it may be only the great change--I mean her death; but it is possible before that that her mind will clear again. Sir James told me that occasionally happened, like--like a ray of sunlight after a stormy day. It would be good if that happened. I would give almost anything to feel that she and I were together again, as we were."Barbara, childless, felt something of motherhood. Michael's simplicity and his sincerity were already known to her, but she had never yet known the strength of him. You could lean on Michael.

In his quiet, undemonstrative way he supported you completely, as a son should; there was no possibility of insecurity. . . .

"God bless you, my dear," she said.

同类推荐
  • 重雕清凉传

    重雕清凉传

    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。
  • 醉古堂剑扫卷

    醉古堂剑扫卷

    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。
  • 毛詩多識

    毛詩多識

    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。
  • Peg Woffington

    Peg Woffington

    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。
  • 归田录

    归田录

    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。
热门推荐
  • 苍荒古陆

    苍荒古陆

    主角木语跨界而来,带领人族强大。千磨百炼之中,创功法,聚人族,与异界各族争机遇。踩万千尸骨,以万族之血,奠我人族之基。我木语今日立人皇之位,向天下万族昭告。犯我族者,不死不休。
  • 冰雪两重天

    冰雪两重天

    神,一个震撼落日大陆的字。凌驾于神之上的,是神之子。生于虚无,活于虚无,死于虚无。位面之神的威严充满整个神界,只有神界执法者才可召唤出来的神之子,是否会帮助神界渡过劫难,而龙九子又何去何从。在落日大陆,一个少年的崛起,突破逆鳞期,掀起腥风血雨。经历无数生死,获得机缘,称霸大陆,而在神界也是顶端的存在,究竟是什么?是执法者,还是那传说中的神之子。与无数强者决斗却毫发无损,一把薙洛神剑威名四海。一个劫字深深在人们印象中,因为,他在人们眼中,是不可冒犯的地位。在神界也如此。神之子与劫究竟是何关系?又是谁更强一些。这些答案,都不知晓。
  • 校草,别闹

    校草,别闹

    她不知道怎么惹到他了,自此之后,他就缠上了她,哪哪都有他的踪影。“哎呀,你干嘛。你房间在隔壁,感紧滚回去”某女看着床上躺着的某男,气急败坏的说。某男却只是挑挑眉,“我没干嘛呀,就是想给你暖床而已,诺!床已经暖好了,快来呀。”此后他便开始了他的甜蜜生活......
  • 苍穹下的战斧

    苍穹下的战斧

    极大陆的苍穹下,一名少年为了成为一名斧战士而不屈的奋斗史。少年不会后退,不会害怕,勇气是他的本心。手中的战斧由始至终都紧紧的握在他的手中,敌人只会在他的斧下消失。这是一本热血的玄幻小说,多多支持。
  • 绑匪总裁:追回前妻生宝宝

    绑匪总裁:追回前妻生宝宝

    他娶她,却不爱她,他说,“充满利益的婚姻注定不会长久,我可以宠你疼你怜你惜你,却不会爱你!”最终,当谣言恶毒如万箭穿心,当正牌归位,鲜血染红的手被挥开,昏迷前她看到他紧张的表情,却是为了他怀里昏迷的女人。“杀!连同她肚子里的孩子!”那一刻,她万念俱灰!
  • 妖医奶爸人界行

    妖医奶爸人界行

    妖医张天为闯入人界不惜自降修为,无牵无挂的他却多了一个女儿和小姨子,为了调查妻子之死,两个世界的风云都将因他搅动。
  • 云雷奶糖

    云雷奶糖

    小辫儿张云雷:@安奈是大林舅妈.满足你这个愿望.……“你走路方式怎么了?我就喜欢你啊,你自卑什么啊你自卑!”“我怕拖累你”“什么你你我我的,拖累什么拖累,我告诉你李安奈我张云雷认定你了你能怎么着啊你”“我……辫儿哥听我说啊你说你女人那么多你非喜欢一个瘸子你!”“你不是瘸子听到没有!我告诉你李安奈”“你必须跟我回天津
  • 我有很多宝贝

    我有很多宝贝

    一天一张卡,十天十一连,本以为是装逼文结果外挂太强不想装了,还是安静的吃顿饭吧。嗯,真香。
  • 公主殿下要谋权

    公主殿下要谋权

    一场战争毁了她的一生,原本是南国唯一的嫡公主,身份尊贵,有着母后的疼惜父王的宠爱。一朝替兄为质子入北国,尝遍人世间的苦辣,想要活着,就必须改变。后来,世间再无嫡公主景逍遥只有陌南公子景渊。费尽心思重回南国,她只有一个目的,便是那个至高无上的位置。她只愿一生一世不再受人摆布……(女主专心搞事业,没有男主)
  • 我的刁蛮校花

    我的刁蛮校花

    为了寻找师父而下山的杨晨,阴差阳错成为了首富千金的小保镖。从此开启了另一番旖旎人生路。在杨晨脚下,没有不敢踩的人,只有不屑踩的人!