Pimpernel and Rosemary Baroness Orczy (mobi reader TXT) đ
- Author: Baroness Orczy
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âDonât let us talk about the past, Peter,â she murmured at last involuntarily, with a pathetic note of appeal in her voice.
âI mean to talk about it, Rosemary,â he retorted quietly, âjust this once more. After that I will fall out of your life. You can cast me out and I will become one of the crowd. I wonât even take your hand, I will try not to see you, not even in my dreams. Though every inflection of your voice makes my bones ache with longing, I shall try not to listen. Just now I held you while we danced; you never once looked at me, but I held you closer than any man ever held woman before. I held you with my soul and heart and bodyâ âjust now and for the last time. And though you never looked at me once, Rosemary, you allowed me to hold you as I didâ ânot your body only, but your soulâ âand whilst we danced and your sweet breath fanned my cheek you belonged to me as completely as you did that night on the river, even though you have pledged your word to Jasper. Though why you did that,â he added, with a quaint change of mood, âGod alone knows.â
âJasper wants me,â she murmured. âHe loves me. He sets me above his ambitionâ ââ
Peter Blakeney gave a harsh, mirthless laugh.
âDear old Jasper,â he said, âeven he would laugh to hear you say that. Ambition! Thereâs no room for ambition in the scheme of Jasperâs life. How can a man be ambitious when all the beneficent genii of this world presided at his birth and showered gifts into his lap? It is we, poor devils, who have ambitionsâ âand see them unfulfilled.â
âAmbitions which you set above your love, above everything,â Rosemary broke in, and turned to look him straight in the eyes. âYou talk of love, Peter,â she went on with sudden vehemence, while the sharp words came tumbling out at last as if from the depths of her overburdened heart. âWhat do you know of love? You are quite right, I did lay in your arms that night, loving you with my whole being, my soul seeking yours and finding it in that unforgettable kiss. My God! How I could have loved you, Peter! But you? What were your thoughts of me the next day, and the next day after that, whilst I waited in suspense which turned to torture for a word from you that would recall that hour? What were your thoughts? Where were you? I was waiting for you at the Lascelles as you had promised you would come over from Oxford the very next day. You did not comeâ ânot for daysâ âweeksâ ââ
âRosemary!â
âNot for daysâ âweeksâ ââ she insisted, âand I waited for a signâ âa letterâ ââ
âRosemary, at the time you understood!â
âI only understood,â she retorted with cold irony, âthat you blamed yourself for having engaged my young affectionsâ âthat you had your way to make in the world before you could think of asking a girl to share your povertyâ âand so onâ âand so onâ âevery time we metâ âand in every letter you wroteâ âwhilst Iâ â
âWhilst you did not understand, Peter,â she went on more calmly. âWhilst you spoke of the future, of winning fame and fortuneâ ââ
âFor you, Rosemary!â he cried involuntarily, and buried his head in his hands. âI was only thinking of youâ ââ
âYou were not thinking of me, Peter, or you would have known that there was no poverty or toil I would not gladly have shared with the man I loved.â
âYes! povertyâ âtoilâ âon an equal footing. Rosemary; but you were rich, famous: already you had the world at your feetâ ââ
âAnd you did not care for me enough, Peter,â she said with a note of fatality in her voice, âto accept wealth, comfort, help in your career from meâ â
âPeter Blakeney the cricketer,â he declaimed with biting sarcasm; âdonât you know, he is the husband of Rosemary Fowkes now. What a glorious career for a man, eh, to be the husband of a world-famous wife?â
âIt would only have been for a time,â she protested.
âA time during which youth would have flown away on the wings of life, taking with it honour, manhood, dignityâ ââ
âAnd love?â
âPerhaps.â
There was silence between them after that. The last word had been spoken, the immutable word of Fate. Peter still sat with his head buried in his hands, his elbows resting on his kneesâ âa hunched up figure weighed down by the heavy hand of an inexorable past.
Rosemary looked down at the bent head, and there, in the shadow, where no one could see save the immortal recorder of sorrows and of tears, a look of great tenderness and of pity crept into her haunting eyes. It was only for a moment. With a great effort of will she shook herself free from the spell that for a while had held possession of her soul. With a deliberate gesture she drew back the curtain, so that her face and figure became all at once flooded with light, she looked down upon the kaleidoscopic picture below: the dusky orchestra had once more begun to belch forth hideous sounds, and hellish screams, the puppets on the dancing floor began one by
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