The Gadfly Ethel Voynich (e reader manga TXT) đ
- Author: Ethel Voynich
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âThen, when I came to my senses, and saw the barrack and the coolies with their leprosy, I understood. I saw that you care more to curry favour with that devilish God of yours than to save me from any hell. And I have remembered that. I forgot just now when you touched me; Iâ âhave been ill, and I used to love you once. But there can be nothing between us but war, and war, and war. What do you want to hold my hand for? Canât you see that while you believe in your Jesus we canât be anything but enemies?â
Montanelli bent his head and kissed the mutilated hand.
âArthur, how can I help believing in Him? If I have kept my faith through all these frightful years, how can I ever doubt Him any more, now that He has given you back to me? Remember, I thought I had killed you.â
âYou have that still to do.â
âArthur!â It was a cry of actual terror; but the Gadfly went on, unheeding:
âLet us be honest, whatever we do, and not shilly-shally. You and I stand on two sides of a pit, and itâs hopeless trying to join hands across it. If you have decided that you canât, or wonât, give up that thingââ âhe glanced again at the crucifix on the wallâ ââyou must consent to what the colonelâ ââ
âConsent! My Godâ âconsentâ âArthur, but I love you!â
The Gadflyâs face contracted fearfully.
âWhich do you love best, me or that thing?â
Montanelli slowly rose. The very soul in him withered with dread, and he seemed to shrivel up bodily, and to grow feeble, and old, and wilted, like a leaf that the frost has touched. He had awaked out of his dream, and the outer darkness was staring in upon an empty place.
âArthur, have just a little mercy on meâ ââ
âHow much had you for me when your lies drove me out to be slave to the blacks on the sugar-plantations? You shudder at thatâ âah, these tenderhearted saints! This is the man after Godâs own heartâ âthe man that repents of his sin and lives. No one dies but his son. You say you love meâ âyour love has cost me dear enough! Do you think I can blot out everything, and turn back into Arthur at a few soft wordsâ âI, that have been dishwasher in filthy half-caste brothels and stable-boy to Creole farmers that were worse brutes than their own cattle? I, that have been zany in cap and bells for a strolling variety showâ âdrudge and jack-of-all-trades to the matadors in the bullfighting ring; I, that have been slave to every black beast who cared to set his foot on my neck; I, that have been starved and spat upon and trampled under foot; I, that have begged for mouldy scraps and been refused because the dogs had the first right? Oh, what is the use of all this! How can I tell you what you have brought on me? And nowâ âyou love me! How much do you love me? Enough to give up your God for me? Oh, what has He done for you, this everlasting Jesusâ âwhat has He suffered for you, that you should love Him more than me? Is it for the pierced hands He is so dear to you? Look at mine! Look here, and here, and hereâ ââ
He tore open his shirt and showed the ghastly scars.
âPadre, this God of yours is an impostor, His wounds are sham wounds, His pain is all a farce! It is I that have the right to your heart! Padre, there is no torture you have not put me to; if you could only know what my life has been! And yet I would not die! I have endured it all, and have possessed my soul in patience, because I would come back and fight this God of yours. I have held this purpose as a shield against my heart, and it has saved me from madness, and from the second death. And now, when I come back, I find Him still in my placeâ âthis sham victim that was crucified for six hours, forsooth, and rose again from the dead! Padre, I have been crucified for five years, and I, too, have risen from the dead. What are you going to do with me? What are you going to do with me?â
He broke down. Montanelli sat like some stone image, or like a dead man set upright. At first, under the fiery torrent of the Gadflyâs despair, he had quivered a little, with the automatic shrinking of the flesh, as under the lash of a whip; but now he was quite still. After a long silence he looked up and spoke, lifelessly, patiently:
âArthur, will you explain to me more clearly? You confuse and terrify me so, I canât understand. What is it you demand of me?â
The Gadfly turned to him a spectral face.
âI demand nothing. Who shall compel love? You are free to choose between us two the one who is most dear to you. If you love Him best, choose Him.â
âI canât understand,â Montanelli repeated wearily. âWhat is there I can choose? I cannot undo the past.â
âYou have to choose between us. If you love me, take that cross off your neck and come away with me. My friends are arranging another attempt, and with your help they could manage it easily. Then, when we are safe over the frontier, acknowledge me publicly. But if you donât love me enough for thatâ âif this wooden idol is more to you than Iâ âthen go to the colonel and tell him you consent. And if you go, then go at once, and spare me the misery of seeing you. I have enough without that.â
Montanelli looked up, trembling faintly. He was beginning to understand.
âI will communicate with your friends, of course. Butâ âto go with youâ âit
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