Sandra Belloni (originally Emilia in England) — Complete. George Meredith

Sandra Belloni (originally Emilia in England) — Complete - George Meredith


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where the light is, sit there, and wait for me, and I will bring you what remains of it. I dare say we can have it mended.”

      Emilia lifted her eyes. “I am not crying for the harp. If you go back I must go with you.”

      “That's out of the question. You must never be found in that sort of place again.”

      “Let us leave the harp,” she murmured. “You cannot go without me. Let me sit here for a minute. Sit with me.”

      She pointed to a place beside herself on the fork of a dry log under flowering hawthorn. A pale shadowy blue centre of light among the clouds told where the moon was. Rain had ceased, and the refreshed earth smelt all of flowers, as if each breeze going by held a nosegay to their nostrils.

      Wilfrid was sensible of a sudden marked change in her. His blood was quicker than his brain in feeling it. Her voice now, even in common speaking, had that vibrating richness which in her singing swept his nerves.

      “If you cry, there must be a cause, you know,” he said, for the sake of keeping the conversation in a safe channel.

      “How brave you are!” was Emilia's sedate exclamation, in reply.

      Her cheeks glowed, as if she had just uttered a great confession, but while the colour mounted to her eyes, they kept their affectionate intentness upon him without a quiver of the lids.

      “Do you think me a coward?” she relieved him by asking sharply, like one whom the thought had turned into a darker path. “I am not. I hung my head while you were fighting, because, what could I do? I would not have left you. Girls can only say, 'I will perish with him.'”

      “But,” Wilfrid tried to laugh, “there was no necessity for that sort of devotion. What are you thinking of? It was half in good-humour, all through. Part of their fun!”

      Clearly Emilia's conception of the recent fray was unchangeable.

      “And the place for girls is at home; that's certain,” he added.

      “I should always like to be where …” Her voice flowed on with singular gravity to that stop.

      Wilfrid's hand travelled mechanically to his pricking cheek-bone.

      Was it possible that a love-scene was coming on as a pendant to that monstrously ridiculous affair of half-an-hour back? To know that she had sufficient sensibility was gratifying, and flattering that it aimed at him. She was really a darling little woman: only too absurd! Had she been on the point of saying that she would always like to be where he, Wilfrid, was? An odd touch of curiosity, peculiar to the languid emotions, made him ask her this: and to her soft “Yes,” he continued briskly, and in the style of condescending fellowship: “Of course we're not going to part!”

      “I wonder,” said Emilia.

      There she sat, evidently sounding right through the future with her young brain, to hear what Destiny might have to say.

      The 'I wonder' rang sweetly in his head. It was as delicate a way of confessing, “I love you with all my soul,” as could be imagined. Extremely refined young ladies could hardly have improved upon it, saving with the angelic shades of sentiment familiar to them.

      Convinced that he had now heard enough for his vanity, Wilfrid returned emphatically to the tone of the world's highroad.

      “By the way,” he said, “you mustn't have any exaggerated idea of this night's work. Remember, also, I have to share the honours with Captain Gambier.”

      “I did not see him,” said Emilia.

      “Are you not cold?” he asked, for a diversion, though he had one of her hands.

      She gave him the other.

      He could not quit them abruptly: nor could he hold both without being drawn to her.

      “What is it you say?” Wilfrid whispered: “men kiss us when we are happy. Is that right? and are you happy?”

      She lifted a clear full face, to which he bent his mouth. Over the flowering hawthorn the moon stood like a windblown white rose of the heavens. The kiss was given and taken. Strange to tell, it was he who drew away from it almost bashfully, and with new feelings.

      Quite unaware that he played the feminine part, Wilfrid alluded to her flight from Richford, with the instinct to sting his heart by a revival of his jealous sensations previously experienced, and so taste the luxury of present satisfaction.

      “Why did you run away from me?” he said, semi-reproachfully.

      “I promised.”

      “Would you not break a promise to stay with me?”

      “Now I would!”

      “You promised Captain Gambier?”

      “No: those poor people.”

      “You are sorry that you went?”

      No: she was happy.

      “You have lost your harp by it,” said Wilfrid.

      “What do you think of me for not guessing—not knowing who sent it?” she returned. “I feel guilty of something all those days that I touched it, not thinking of you. Wicked, filthy little creature that I was! I despise ungrateful girls.”

      “I detest anything that has to do with gratitude,” Wilfrid appended, “pray give me none. Why did you go away with Captain Gambier?”

      “I was very fond of him,” she replied unhesitatingly, but speaking as it were with numbed lips. “I wanted to tell him, to thank him and hold his hand. I told him of my promise. He spoke to me a moment in the garden, you know. He said he was leaving to go to London early, and would wait for me in the carriage: then we might talk. He did not wish to talk to me in the garden.”

      “And you went with him in the carriage, and told him you were so grateful?”

      “Yes; but men do not like us to be grateful.”

      “So, he said he would do all sorts of things on condition that you were not grateful?”

      “He said—yes: I forget: I do forget! How can I tell what he said?” Emilia added piteously. “I feel as if I had been emptied out of a sack!”

      Wilfrid was pierced with laughter; and then the plainspoken simile gave him a chilling sensation while he was rising to the jealous pitch.

      “Did he talk about taking you to Italy? Put your head into the sack, and think!”

      “Yes,” she answered blandly, an affirmative that caused him some astonishment, for he had struck at once to the farthest end of his suspicions.

      “He feels as I do about the Italian Schools,” said Emilia. “He wishes me to owe my learning to him. He says it will make him happy, and I thought so too.” She threw in a “then.”

      Wilfrid looked moodily into the opposite hedge.

      “Did he name the day for your going?” he asked presently, little anticipating another “Yes”: but it came: and her rather faltering manner showed her to be conscious too that the word was getting to be a black one to him.

      “Did you say you would go?”

      “I did.”

      Question and answer crossed like two rapiers.

      Wilfrid jumped up.

      “The smell of this tree's detestable,” he said, glancing at the shadowing hawthorn.

      Emilia rose quietly, plucked a flower off the tree, and put it in her bosom.

      Their way was down a green lane and across long meadow-paths dim in the moonlight. A nightingale was heard on this side and on that. Overhead they had a great space of sky with broken cloud full of the glory of the moon. The meadows dipped to a brook, slenderly


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