Saturday was a busy day at Prior’s Ash; it was a busy day at the banking-house of Godolphin, Crosse, and Godolphin. Country towns and country banks are always more busy on a market-day.
George Godolphin sat in the manager’s room, full of business. Not much more than a week had elapsed since that visit of his to London; and it was now Thomas’s turn to be away. Thomas had gone to town. His errand there was to consult one of the first surgeons of the day, on the subject of his own health. Not so much that he had hope from the visit, as that it would be a satisfaction to his family to have made it.
George Godolphin was full of business. Full of talking also. A hearty1 country client, one who farmed a large number of acres, and generally kept a good round sum in the Bank’s coffers, was with him. What little point of business he had had occasion to see one of the partners upon, was concluded, and he and George were making merry together, enjoying a gossip as to the state of affairs in general and in particular, out of doors and in. Never a man more free from care (if appearances might be trusted) than George Godolphin! When that hearty, honest farmer went forth2, he would have been willing to testify that, of carking care, George possessed3 none.
As he went on, George sat down and bent4 over some account-books. His face had changed. Lines, of what looked worse than care, grew out upon it, and he lifted his hand to his brow with a weary gesture. Another minute, and he was interrupted again. He had very little peace on a market-day.
“Lord Averil wishes to see you, sir,” said one of the clerks. It was Isaac Hastings.
To any other announced name, George Godolphin’s ready answer would have been, “Show him in.” To that of Lord Averil he evidently hesitated, and a sudden flush dyed his face. Isaac, keen in observation as was his father, as was his sister Grace, noticed it. To him, it looked like a flush of shrinking fear.
“Did he ask for me?”
“He asked for Mr. Godolphin, sir. He says it will be the same thing if he sees you. Shall I show him in?”
“Of course,” replied George. “What do you stop for?” he angrily added.
He rose from his seat; he put a chair or two in place; he turned to the table, and laid rapidly some of its papers one upon another—all in a fuss and bustle5 not in the least characteristic of George Godolphin. Isaac thought he must have lost his usual presence of mind. As to the reproach addressed to himself, “What do you stop for?”—it had never been the custom to show clients into the presence of the partners without first asking for permission.
[226]Lord Averil came in. George, only in that short time, had become himself again. They chatted a minute on passing topics, and Lord Averil mentioned that he had not known, until then, that Mr. Godolphin was in London.
“He went up on Thursday,” observed George. “I expect he will be back early in the week.”
“I intend to be in London myself next week,” said Lord Averil. “Will it be convenient for me to have those bonds of mine to-day?” he continued.
A sudden coursing on of all George’s pulses; a whirling rush in his brain. “Bonds?” he mechanically answered.
“The bonds of that stock which your father bought for me years ago,” explained Lord Averil. “They were deposited here for security. Don’t you know it?”—looking at George’s countenance6, which seemed to speak only of perplexity. “Mr. Godolphin would know.”
“Oh yes, yes,” replied George, regaining7 his breath and his courage. “It is all right: I did not remember for the moment. Of course—the deposited bonds.”
“I am thinking of selling out,” said Lord Averil. “Indeed, I have been for some time thinking of it, but have idly put it off. If it would be quite convenient to give me the bonds, I would take them to town with me. I shall go up on Monday or Tuesday.”
Now, George Godolphin, rally your wits! What are you to answer? George did rally them, in a lame8 manner. Confused words, which neither he nor Lord Averil precisely9 understood—to the effect that in Thomas Godolphin’s absence, he, George, did not know exactly where to put his hand upon the securities—came forth. So Lord Averil courteously10 begged him not to take any trouble about it. He would leave them until another opportunity.
He shook hands cordially with George, and went out with a mental comment, “Not half the man of business that his brother is, and his father was: but wondrously11 like Cecil!” George watched the door close. He wiped the dewdrops which had gathered on his face; he looked round with the beseeching12 air of one seeking relief from some intense pain. Had Lord Averil persisted in his demand, what would have remained for him? Those are the moments in which man has been tempted13 to resort to the one irredeemable sin.
The door opened again, and George gave a gasp14 as one in agony. It was only Isaac Hastings. “Mr. Hurde wishes to know, sir, whether those bills are to go up to Glyn’s to-day or Monday?”
“They had better go to-day,” replied George. “Has Mr. Barnaby been in to-day?” he added, as Isaac was departing.
“Not yet.”
“If he does not come soon, some one must go down to the corn market to him. He is sure to be there. That is, if he is in town to-day.”
“I know he is in town,” replied Isaac. “I saw him as I was coming back from dinner. He was talking to Mr. Verrall.”
“To Mr. Verrall!” almost shouted George, looking up as if electrified15 into life. “Is he back again?”
“He is back again, sir. I think he had only then arrived. He was coming from towards the railway station.”
[227]“You are sure it was Mr. Verrall?” reiterated16 George.
Isaac Hastings smiled. What could make Mr. George Godolphin so eager? “I am sure it was Mr. Verrall.”
George felt as if a whole ton weight of care had been lifted from him. He had been so long in the habit of flying to Mr. Verrall in his difficulties, that it seemed to him he would only have to go to him, to remedy the one hanging over him now. Mr. Verrall had generally accomplished17 the task as men of his profession do accomplish such tasks—by laying up an awful day of reckoning for the future. That day was not now far off for George Godolphin.
The Bank closed later on Saturdays, and George remained at his post to the end. Then he dined. Then, at the dusk-hour—nay, at the hour of darkness, he went out to Lady Godolphin’s Folly18. Why was it that he rarely went to the Folly now, except under the covert19 shades of night? Did he fear people might comment on his intimacy20 with Mr. Verrall, and seek a clue to its cause? Or did he fear the world’s gossip on another score?
George arrived at Lady Godolphin’s Folly, and was admitted to an empty room. “Mr. Verrall had returned, and had dined with Mrs. Pain, but had gone out after dinner,” the servant said. He had believed Mrs. Pain to be in the drawing-room. Mrs. Pain was evidently not there, in spite of the man’s searching eyes. He looked into the next room, with similar result.
“Perhaps, sir, she has stepped out on the terrace with her dogs?” observed the man.
George—ungallant as he was!—cared not where Mrs. Pain might have stepped at that present moment: his anxiety was for Mr. Verrall. “Have you any idea when your master will be in?” he inquired of the servant.
“I don’t think he’ll be long, sir. I heard him say he was tired, and should go to bed early. He may have gone to Ashlydyat. He told Mrs. Pain that he had met Mr. Godolphin in town yesterday, and he should call and tell Miss Godolphin that he was better in London than he felt here. I don’t know, sir, though, that he meant he should call to-night.”
The man left the room, and George remained alone. He drummed on the table; he tried several seats in succession; he got up and looked at his face in the glass. A haggard face then. Where was Verrall? Where was Charlotte? She might be able to tell him where Verrall had gone, and when he would be in. Altogether George was in a state of restlessness little better than torture.
He impatiently opened the glass doors, which were only closed, not fastened, and stood a few moments looking out upon the night. He gazed in all directions, but could see nothing of Charlotte; and Mr. Verrall did not appear to be coming. “I’ll see,” suddenly exclaimed George, starting off, “whether he is at Ashlydyat.”
He did well. Action is better than inertness22 at these moments. Standing23 outside the porch at Ashlydyat, talking to a friend, was Andrew, one of their servants. When he saw George, he drew back to hold open the door for him.
“Are my sisters alone, Andrew?”
[228]“Yes, sir.”
George scarcely expected the answer, and it disappointed him. “Quite alone?” he reiterated. “Has no one called on them to-night?”
The man shook his head, wondering probably who Mr. George might be expecting to call. “They are all alone, sir. Miss Janet has one of her bad headaches.”
George did not want to go in, Mr. Verrall not being there, and this last item afforded him an excuse for retreating without doing so. “Then I’ll not disturb her to-night,” said he. “You need not say that I came up, Andrew.”
“Very well, sir.”
He quitted Andrew, and turned off to the left, deep in thought, striking into a sheltered path. It was by no means the direct road back to the Folly, neither was it to Prior’s Ash. In point of fact, it led to nothing but the Dark Plain and its superstition24. Not a woman-servant of Ashlydyat, perhaps not one of its men, would have gone down that path at night: for at the other end it brought them out to the archway, before which the Shadow was wont25 to show itself.
Why did George take it? He could not have told. Had he been asked why, he might have said that one way, to a man bowed under a sharp weight of trouble, is the same as another. True. But the path led him to no part where he could wish to go; and he would have to make his way to Lady Godolphin’s Folly through the gorse bushes of the Dark Plain, over the very Shadow itself. These apparently26 chance steps, which seem to be taken without premeditation or guidance of ours, sometimes lead to strange results.
George went along moodily27, his hands in his pockets, his footfalls slow and light. But for the latter fact, he might not have had the pleasure of disturbing a certain scene that was taking place under cover of the archway.
Were they ghosts, enacting28 it? Scarcely. Two forms, ghostly or human, were there. One of them looked like a woman’s. It was dressed in dark clothes, and a dark shawl was folded over the head, not, however, concealing29 the features—and they were those of Charlotte Pain. She, at any rate, was not ghostly. The other, George took to be Mr. Verrall. He was leaning against the brickwork, in apparently as hopeless a mood as George himself.
They were enjoying a quarrel. Strange that they should leave the house and come to this lonely spot in the grounds of Ashlydyat to hold it! Charlotte was evidently in one of her tempers. She paced to and fro under the archway, something like a restrained tiger, pouring forth a torrent30 of sharp words and reproaches, all in a suppressed tone.
“I’ll tell you what it is,” were the first distinct words of anger George caught. But her companion interrupted her, his tone one of sadness and humility31.
“I’ll tell you what it is, Charlotte——”
The start made by George Godolphin at the tones of the voice, the involuntary sound of utter astonishment32 that escaped him, disturbed them. Charlotte, with a cry of terror, darted33 one way, her companion another.
[229]But the latter was not quick enough to elude34 George Godolphin. Springing forward, George caught him in his powerful grasp, really to assure himself that it was no ghost, but genuine flesh and blood. Then George turned the face to the starlight, and recognized the features of the dead-and-gone Mr. Rodolf Pain.
The return of a husband, popularly supposed to be dead and out of the way for good, may be regarded by the wife as a blessing35 from some special providence36, or as a source of annoying embarrassment37, according to the lady’s own feeling on the subject. Undoubtedly38, Charlotte Pain looked upon it, and most unmistakably so, in the latter light. Charlotte knew, better than the world, that Mr. Rodolf Pain was not dead; but she had believed him to be as surely out of her way as though death and some safe metropolitan39 cemetery40 had irrevocably claimed him. Whatever trifling41 accident might have happened to put Mr. Rodolf Pain and the British criminal law at issue, Charlotte, at any rate, had assumed it one not to be easily got over, except by the perpetual exile of the gentleman from the British shores. When the little affair had occurred, and Mr. Rodolf had saved himself and his liberty by only a hair’s-breadth, choosing a foreign exile and a false name in preference to some notoriety at a certain court (a court which does not bear a pleasant sound, and rises ominous42 and dark and gloomy in the heart of the city), it had pleased Charlotte and those connected with her to give out that Mr. Rodolf Pain had died. In Mr. Rodolf Pain’s going out of the world by death, there was certainly no disgrace, provided that he went out naturally; that is, without what may be called malice43 prepense on his own part. But, for Mr. Rodolf Pain to be compelled to make his exit from London society after another fashion, was quite a different affair—an affair which could never have been quite tolerated by Charlotte: not on his score, but on her own. Any superfluous44 consideration for him, Charlotte had never been troubled with. Before her marriage she had regarded him in the light of a nonentity45; since that ceremony, as an incumbrance. Therefore, on the whole, Charlotte was tolerably pleased to get rid of him, and she played her rôle of widow to perfection. No inconvenient46 disclosure, as to the facts of his hasty exit, had come out to the public, for it had fortunately happened that the transaction, or transactions, which led to it, had not been done in his own name. To describe Charlotte’s dismay when he returned, and she found her fond assumption of his perpetual exile to have been a false security, would take a cleverer pen than mine. No other misfortune known to earth, could have been looked upon by Charlotte as so dire21 a calamity47. Had Prior’s Ash been blown up, herself included, by some sprung mine, or swallowed down by an earthquake, it would have been little, in comparison.
It certainly was not pleasant to be startled by a faint tap at the unscreened window, while she sat under the chandelier, busy at what she so rarely attempted, some useless fancy-work. Yet that was the unceremonious manner in which her husband made his return known to her. Charlotte was expecting no visitors that night. It was the night of George Godolphin’s dinner-party, at which Mr. Verrall had not appeared, having started for London instead. When the tapping came, Charlotte turned her head towards the window in surprise. No[230] one was in the habit of entering that way, save free-and-easy George Godolphin; he would now and then do so; sometimes Mr. Verrall. But Charlotte knew of George’s dinner party, and Mr. Verrall was away. She could see nothing of the intruder: the room was ablaze48 with light; outside, it was, comparatively speaking, dark; and the window was also partially49 shaded by its lace curtains. Charlotte thought she must have been mistaken, and went on unravelling50 her crochet51 mat.
The tapping came again. “Very odd!” thought Charlotte. “Come in,” she called out.
No one came in. There was no response at all for a minute or two. Then there came another timid tapping.
Charlotte’s dress was half covered with cotton. She rose, shook it, let the cotton and the mat (what remained of it) fall to the ground, walked to the window, and opened it.
At the first moment she could see nothing. It was bright moonlight, and she had come from the blazing light within, beside which that outer light was so cold and pure. Not for that reason could she see nothing, but because there appeared to be nothing to see. She ranged her eyes in vain over the terrace, over the still landscape beyond.
“Charlotte!”
It was the faintest possible voice, and close to her. Faint as it was though, there was that in its tone which struck on every fibre of Charlotte’s frame with dismay. Gathered against the walls of the Folly, making a pretence52 to shelter himself beyond a brilliant cape-jessamine which was trained there, was the slight figure of a man. A mere53 shred54 of a man, with a shrinking, attenuated55 frame: the frame of one who has lived in some long agony, bodily or mental: and a white face that shivered as he stood.
Not more white, not more shivering than Charlotte’s. Her complexion—well, you have heard of it, as one too much studied to allow vulgar changes to come upon it, in a general way. But there are moments in a lifetime when Nature asserts herself, and Art retires before her. Charlotte’s face turned to the hue56 of the dead, and Charlotte’s dismay broke forth in a low passionate57 wail58. It was Rodolf Pain.
A moment of terrified bewilderment; a torrent of rapid words; not of sympathy, or greeting, but of anger; and Charlotte was pushing him away with her hands, she neither knew nor cared whither. It was dangerous for him to be there, she said. He must go.
“I’ll go into the thicket59, Charlotte,” he answered, pointing to the trees on the left. “Come to me there.”
He glided60 off as he spoke61, under cover of the walls. Charlotte, feeling that she should like to decline the invitation had she dared, enveloped62 her head and shoulders in a black shawl, and followed him. Nothing satisfactory came of the interview—except recrimination. Charlotte was in a towering passion that he should have ventured back at all; Rodolf complained that between them all he had been made the scapegoat63. In returning home, she caught sight of George Godolphin approaching the house, just as she was about to steal across the lawn. Keeping under cover of the trees, she got in by a back entrance, and sat down to her work in the drawing-room, protesting to George,[231] when he was admitted, that she had not been out. No wonder her face looked strange in spite of its embellishments!
Her interviews with Rodolf Pain appeared to be ill chosen. On the following night she met him in the same place: he had insisted upon it, and she did not dare refuse. More recrimination, more anger; in the midst of which George Godolphin again broke upon them. Charlotte screamed aloud in her terror, and Rodolf ran away. But that Charlotte laid detaining hands upon George, the returned man might have been discovered then, and that would not have suited Charlotte.
A few more days and that climax64 was to arrive. The plantation65 appearing unsafe, Rodolf Pain proposed the archway. There they should surely be unmolested: the ghostly fears of the neighbourhood and of Ashlydyat kept every one away from the spot. And there, two or three times, had Charlotte met him, quarrelling always, when they were again intruded66 upon, and again by George. This time to some purpose.
George Godolphin’s astonishment was excessive. In his wildest flights of fancy he had never given a thought to the suspicion that Rodolf Pain could be alive. Charlotte had not been more confidential67 with George than with the rest of the world. Making a merit of what could not well be avoided, she now gave him a few particulars.
For when she looked back in her flight and saw that Rodolf Pain was fairly caught, that there was no further possibility of the farce68 of his death being kept up to George, she deemed it well to turn back again. Better bring her managing brains to the explanation, than leave it to that simple calf69, whom she had the honour of calling husband. The fact was, Rodolf Pain had never been half cunning enough, half rogue70 enough, for the work assigned him by Mr. Verrall. He—Mr. Verrall—had always said that Rodolf had brought the trouble upon himself, in consequence of trying to exercise a little honesty. Charlotte agreed with the opinion: and every contemptuous epithet71 cast by Mr. Verrall on the unfortunate exile, Charlotte had fully72 echoed.
George was some little time before he could understand as much as was vouchsafed73 him of the explanation. They stood in the shadow of the archway, Charlotte keeping her black shawl well over her head and round her face; Rodolf, his arms folded, leaning against the inner circle of the stonework.
“What, do you say? sent you abroad?” questioned George, somewhat bewildered.
“It was that wretched business of Appleby’s,” replied Rodolf Pain. “You must have heard of it. The world heard enough of it.”
“Appleby—Appleby? Yes, I remember,” remarked George. “A nice swindle it was. But what had you to do with it?”
“In point of fact, I only had to do with it at second-hand,” said Rodolf Pain, his tone one of bitter meaning. “It was Verrall’s affair—as everything else is. I only executed his orders.”
“But surely neither you nor Verrall had anything to do with that swindling business of Appleby’s?” cried George, his voice as full of amazement74 as the other’s was of bitterness.
Charlotte interposed, her manner so eager, so flurried, as to impart the suspicion that she must have some personal interest in it. “Rodolf,[232] hold your tongue! Where’s the use of bringing up this old speculative75 nonsense to Mr. George Godolphin? He does not care to hear about it.”
“I would bring it up to all the world if I could,” was Rodolf’s answer, ringing with its own sense of injury. “Verrall told me in the most solemn manner that if things ever cleared, through Appleby’s death, or in any other way, so as to make it safe for me to return, that that hour he would send for me. Well: Appleby has been dead these six months; and yet he leaves me on, on, on, in the New World, without so much as a notice of it. Now, it’s of no use growing fierce again, Charlotte! I’ll tell Mr. George Godolphin if I please. I am not the patient slave you helped to drive abroad: the trodden worm turns at last. Do you happen to know, sir, that Appleby’s dead?”
“I don’t know anything about Appleby,” replied George. “I remember the name, as being owned by a gentleman who was subjected to some bad treatment in the shape of swindling, by one Rustin. But what had you or Verrall to do with it?”
“Psha!” said Rodolf Pain. “Verrall was Rustin.”
George Godolphin opened his eyes to their utmost width. “N—o!” he said, very slowly, certain curious ideas beginning to crowd into his mind. Certain remembrances also.
“He was.—Charlotte, I tell you it is of no use: I will speak. What does it matter, Mr. George Godolphin’s knowing it? Verrall was the real principal—Rustin, in fact; I, the ostensible76 one. And I had to suffer.”
“Did Appleby think you were Rustin?” inquired George, thoroughly77 bewildered.
“Appleby at one time thought I was Verrall. Oh, I assure you there were wheels within wheels at work there. Of course there had to be, to carry on such a concern as that. It is so still. Verrall, you know, could not be made the scapegoat, he takes care of that—besides, it would blow the whole thing to pieces, if any evil fell upon him. It fell upon me, and I had to suffer for it, and abroad I went. I did not grumble78; it would have been of no use: had I stayed at home and braved it out, I should have been sent abroad, I suppose, at her Majesty’s cost——”
Charlotte interrupted, in a terrible passion. “Have you no sense of humiliation79, Rodolf Pain, that you tell these strange stories? Mr. George Godolphin, I pray you do not listen to him!”
“I am safe,” replied George. “Pain can say what he pleases. It is safe with me.”
“As to humiliation, that does not fall so much to my share as it does to another’s, in the light I look at it. I was not the principal; I was only the scapegoat; principals rarely are made the scapegoats80 in that sort of business. Let it go, I say. I took the punishment without a word. But, now that the man’s dead, and I can come home with safety, I want to know why I was not sent for?”
“I don’t believe the man’s dead,” observed Charlotte.
“I am quite sure that he is dead,” said Rodolf Pain. “I was told it from a sure and certain source, some one who came out there, and who used to know Appleby. He said the death was in the Times, and he knew it for a fact besides.”
[233]“Appleby? Appleby?” mused81 George, his thoughts going back to a long-past morning, when he had been an unseen witness to Charlotte’s interview with a gentleman giving that name—who had previously82 accosted83 him in the porch at Ashlydyat, mistaking it for the residence of Mr. Verrall. “I remember his coming down here once.”
“I remember it too,” said Rodolf Pain, significantly, “and the passion it put Verrall into. Verrall thought his address, down here, had oozed84 out through my carelessness. The trouble that we had with that Appleby, first and last! It went on for years. The bother was patched up at times, but only to break out again; and to send me into exile at last.”
“Does Verrall know of his death?” inquired George of Rodolf.
“There’s not a doubt that he must know of it. And Charlotte says she won’t ask Verrall, and won’t tell him I am here! My belief is that she knows Appleby’s dead.”
Charlotte had resumed her walk under the archway: pacing there—as was remarked before—like a restrained tiger. She took no notice of Rodolf’s last speech.
“Why not tell Verrall yourself that you are here?” was George’s sensible question.
“Well—you see, Mr. George Godolphin, I’d rather not, as long as there’s the least doubt as to Appleby’s death. I feel none myself: but if it should turn out to be a mistake, my appearance here would do good neither to me nor to Verrall. And Verrall’s a dangerous man to cross. He might kill me in his passion. It takes a good deal to put him into one, but when it does come, it’s like a tornado85.”
“You acknowledge that there is a doubt as to Appleby’s death, then!” sarcastically86 cried Charlotte.
“I say that it’s just possible. It was not being fully certain that brought me back in this clandestine87 way. What I want you to do is to ask Verrall if Appleby’s dead. I believe he will answer ‘Yes.’ ‘Very well,’ then you can say, ‘Rodolf Pain’s home again.’ And if——”
“And if he says, ‘No, he is not dead,’ what then?” fiercely interrupted Charlotte.
“Then you can tell me privately88, and I must depart the way I came. But I don’t depart without being satisfied of the fact,” pointedly89 added Mr. Pain, as if he had not entire and implicit90 reliance upon Charlotte’s word. “My firm belief is that he is dead, and that Verrall will tell you he is dead. In that case I am a free man to-morrow.”
Charlotte turned her head towards him, terrible anger in her tone, and in her face. “And how is your reappearance to be accounted for to those who look upon you as dead?”
“I don’t care how,” indifferently answered Rodolf. “I did not spread the report of my own death. If you did, you can contradict it.”
“If I did do it, it was to save your reputation,” returned Charlotte, scarcely able to speak in her passion.
“I know,” said Rodolf Pain. “You feared something or other might come out about your husband, and so you thought you’d kill me off-hand. Two for yourself and one for me, Charlotte.”
[234]She did not answer.
“If my coming back is so annoying to you, we can live apart,” he resumed. “You pretty well gave me a sickener before I went away. As you know.”
“May-be,” replied Rodolf Pain, his tone sad and weary. “I have been so hardly treated between you and Verrall, Charlotte, that I don’t care who knows it.”
“Where are you staying?” asked George, wondering whether the shady spots about Ashlydyat sheltered him by day as well as by night.
“Not far away, sir: at a roadside inn,” was the answer. “No one knew me much, about here, in the old days; but, to make assurance doubly sure, I only come out in the evening. Look here, Charlotte. If you refuse to ask Verrall, or to help me, I shall go to London, and obtain the information there. I am not quite without friends in the great city: they would receive me better than you have received me.”
“I wonder you did not go there at once,” said Charlotte, sharply.
“It was natural that I should go first where my wife was,” returned Rodolf Pain; “even though she had not been the most affectionate of wives to me.”
Charlotte was certainly not showing herself particularly affectionate then, whether she had, or had not, in the past days. Truth to say, whatever may have been her personal predilection92 or the opposite for the gentleman, his return had brought all her fears to the surface. His personal safety was imperilled; and, with that, disgrace loomed93 in ominous attendance; a disgrace which would be reflected upon Charlotte. Could she have sent Rodolf Pain flying on electric wires to the remotest region of the known or unknown globe, she would have done it then.
Leaving them to battle out their dispute alone, George Godolphin bent his steps to Lady Godolphin’s Folly, walking over the very Shadow, black as jet, treading in and out amid the dwarf94 bushes, which, when regarded from a distance, looked so like graves. He gained the Folly, and rang.
The servant admitted him to the drawing-room. It was empty as before. “Has Mr. Verrall not come in?” asked George.
“He has come in, sir. I thought he was here. I will look for him.”
“What! Gone to bed?” cried George.
“Yes, sir.”
“Did you tell him I had been here when he came in?”
“I told him you had been here, sir. In fact, I thought you were here still. I did not know you had left.”
“Did Mr. Verrall tell you now that he could see me?”
“He told me to say that he had retired for the night, sir.”
“Is he in bed?” questioned George.
The servant hesitated. “He spoke to me through the door, sir. He did not open it.”
[235]George caught up his hat, the very movement of his hand showing displeasure. “Tell your master that I shall be here the first thing in the morning. I want to see him.”
He passed out, a conviction upon his mind—though he could scarcely tell why it should have arisen—that Mr. Verrall had not retired for the night, but that he had gone upstairs merely to avoid him. The thought angered him excessively. When he had gone some little distance beyond the terrace, he turned and looked at the upper windows of the house. There shone a light in Mr. Verrall’s chamber96. “Not in bed, at any rate,” thought George. “He might have seen me if he would. I shall tell him——”
A touch upon George’s arm. Some one had glided silently up. He turned and saw Charlotte.
“You will not betray the secret that you have learnt to-night?” she passionately97 whispered.
“Is it likely?” he asked.
“He is only a fool, you know, at the best,” was her next complimentary98 remark. “But fools give more trouble sometimes than wise people.”
“You may depend upon me,” was George’s rejoinder. “Where is he?”
“Got rid of for the night,” said Charlotte, in a terrible tone. “Are you going in to see Verrall?”
“No. Verrall declines to see me. I am going home. Good night.”
“Declines to see you? He is tired, I suppose. Good night, George!”
George Godolphin walked away at a sober pace, reflecting on the events of the day—of the evening. That he had been intensely surprised by the resuscitation99 of Rodolf Pain was indisputable; but George had too much care upon him to give it more than a passing thought, now that the surprise was over. Rodolf Pain occupied a very small space in the estimation of George Godolphin. Charlotte had just said he was a fool: probably George shared in the opinion.
But, however much he felt inclined to dismiss the gentleman from his mind, he could not so readily dismiss a certain revelation made by him. That Rustin was Verrall. Whoever “Rustin” may have been, or what had been his influence on the fortunes, good or ill, of Mr. George Godolphin, it concerns us not very closely to inquire. That George had had dealings with this “Rustin”—dealings which did not bear for him any pleasant reminiscence—and that George had never in his life got to see this Rustin, are sufficient facts for us to know. Rustin was one of those who had contrived100 to ease George of a good deal of superfluous money at odd times, leaving only trouble in its place. Many a time had George prayed Verrall’s good offices with his friend Rustin, to hold over this bill; to renew that acceptance. Verrall had never refused, and his sympathy with George and abuse of Rustin were great, when his mediation101 proved—as was sometimes the case—unsuccessful. To hear that this Rustin was Verrall himself, opened out a whole field of suggestive speculation102 to George. Not pleasant speculation, you may be sure.
He sat himself down, in his deep thought, on that same spot where[236] Thomas Godolphin had sat the evening of George’s dinner-party; the broken bench, near the turnstile. Should he be able to weather the storm that was gathering103 so ominously104 above his head? Was that demand of Lord Averil’s to-day the first rain-drop of the darkening clouds? In sanguine105 moments—and most moments are sanguine to men of the light temperament106 of George Godolphin—he felt not a doubt that he should weather it. There are some men who systematically107 fling care and gloom from them. They cannot look trouble steadily108 in the face: they glance aside from it; they do not see it if it comes: they clothe it with the rose-hues of hope: but look at it, they do not. Shallow and careless by nature, they cannot feel deep sorrow themselves, or be too cautious of any wrong they inflict109 on others. They may bring ruin upon the world, but they go jauntily110 on their way. George had gone on in his way, in an easy, gentlemanly sort of manner, denying himself no gratification, and giving little heed111 to the day of reckoning that might come.
But on this night his mood had changed. Affairs generally were wearing to him an aspect of gloom: of gloom so preternaturally dark and hopeless, that his spirits were weighed down by it. For one thing, this doubt of Verrall irritated him. If the man had played him false, had been holding the cards of a double game, why, what an utter fool he, George, had been! How long he sat on that lonely seat he never knew: as long as his brother had, that past night. The one had been ruminating112 on his forthcoming fate—death; the other was lost in the anticipation113 of a worse fate—disgrace and ruin. As he rose to pursue his way down the narrow and ghostly Ash-tree Walk, a low cry burst from his lips, sharp as the one that had been wrung114 from Thomas in his physical agony.
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1 hearty | |
adj.热情友好的;衷心的;尽情的,纵情的 | |
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2 forth | |
adv.向前;向外,往外 | |
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3 possessed | |
adj.疯狂的;拥有的,占有的 | |
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4 bent | |
n.爱好,癖好;adj.弯的;决心的,一心的 | |
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5 bustle | |
v.喧扰地忙乱,匆忙,奔忙;n.忙碌;喧闹 | |
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6 countenance | |
n.脸色,面容;面部表情;vt.支持,赞同 | |
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7 regaining | |
复得( regain的现在分词 ); 赢回; 重回; 复至某地 | |
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8 lame | |
adj.跛的,(辩解、论据等)无说服力的 | |
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9 precisely | |
adv.恰好,正好,精确地,细致地 | |
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10 courteously | |
adv.有礼貌地,亲切地 | |
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11 wondrously | |
adv.惊奇地,非常,极其 | |
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12 beseeching | |
adj.恳求似的v.恳求,乞求(某事物)( beseech的现在分词 ) | |
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13 tempted | |
v.怂恿(某人)干不正当的事;冒…的险(tempt的过去分词) | |
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14 gasp | |
n.喘息,气喘;v.喘息;气吁吁他说 | |
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15 electrified | |
v.使电气化( electrify的过去式和过去分词 );使兴奋 | |
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16 reiterated | |
反复地说,重申( reiterate的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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17 accomplished | |
adj.有才艺的;有造诣的;达到了的 | |
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18 folly | |
n.愚笨,愚蠢,蠢事,蠢行,傻话 | |
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19 covert | |
adj.隐藏的;暗地里的 | |
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20 intimacy | |
n.熟悉,亲密,密切关系,亲昵的言行 | |
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21 dire | |
adj.可怕的,悲惨的,阴惨的,极端的 | |
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22 inertness | |
n.不活泼,没有生气;惰性;惯量 | |
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23 standing | |
n.持续,地位;adj.永久的,不动的,直立的,不流动的 | |
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24 superstition | |
n.迷信,迷信行为 | |
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25 wont | |
adj.习惯于;v.习惯;n.习惯 | |
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26 apparently | |
adv.显然地;表面上,似乎 | |
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27 moodily | |
adv.喜怒无常地;情绪多变地;心情不稳地;易生气地 | |
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28 enacting | |
制定(法律),通过(法案)( enact的现在分词 ) | |
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29 concealing | |
v.隐藏,隐瞒,遮住( conceal的现在分词 ) | |
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30 torrent | |
n.激流,洪流;爆发,(话语等的)连发 | |
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31 humility | |
n.谦逊,谦恭 | |
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32 astonishment | |
n.惊奇,惊异 | |
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33 darted | |
v.投掷,投射( dart的过去式和过去分词 );向前冲,飞奔 | |
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34 elude | |
v.躲避,困惑 | |
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35 blessing | |
n.祈神赐福;祷告;祝福,祝愿 | |
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36 providence | |
n.深谋远虑,天道,天意;远见;节约;上帝 | |
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37 embarrassment | |
n.尴尬;使人为难的人(事物);障碍;窘迫 | |
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38 undoubtedly | |
adv.确实地,无疑地 | |
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39 metropolitan | |
adj.大城市的,大都会的 | |
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40 cemetery | |
n.坟墓,墓地,坟场 | |
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41 trifling | |
adj.微不足道的;没什么价值的 | |
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42 ominous | |
adj.不祥的,不吉的,预兆的,预示的 | |
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43 malice | |
n.恶意,怨恨,蓄意;[律]预谋 | |
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44 superfluous | |
adj.过多的,过剩的,多余的 | |
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45 nonentity | |
n.无足轻重的人 | |
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46 inconvenient | |
adj.不方便的,令人感到麻烦的 | |
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47 calamity | |
n.灾害,祸患,不幸事件 | |
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48 ablaze | |
adj.着火的,燃烧的;闪耀的,灯火辉煌的 | |
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49 partially | |
adv.部分地,从某些方面讲 | |
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50 unravelling | |
解开,拆散,散开( unravel的现在分词 ); 阐明; 澄清; 弄清楚 | |
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51 crochet | |
n.钩针织物;v.用钩针编制 | |
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52 pretence | |
n.假装,作假;借口,口实;虚伪;虚饰 | |
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53 mere | |
adj.纯粹的;仅仅,只不过 | |
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54 shred | |
v.撕成碎片,变成碎片;n.碎布条,细片,些少 | |
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55 attenuated | |
v.(使)变细( attenuate的过去式和过去分词 );(使)变薄;(使)变小;减弱 | |
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56 hue | |
n.色度;色调;样子 | |
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57 passionate | |
adj.热情的,热烈的,激昂的,易动情的,易怒的,性情暴躁的 | |
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58 wail | |
vt./vi.大声哀号,恸哭;呼啸,尖啸 | |
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59 thicket | |
n.灌木丛,树林 | |
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60 glided | |
v.滑动( glide的过去式和过去分词 );掠过;(鸟或飞机 ) 滑翔 | |
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61 spoke | |
n.(车轮的)辐条;轮辐;破坏某人的计划;阻挠某人的行动 v.讲,谈(speak的过去式);说;演说;从某种观点来说 | |
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62 enveloped | |
v.包围,笼罩,包住( envelop的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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63 scapegoat | |
n.替罪的羔羊,替人顶罪者;v.使…成为替罪羊 | |
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64 climax | |
n.顶点;高潮;v.(使)达到顶点 | |
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65 plantation | |
n.种植园,大农场 | |
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66 intruded | |
n.侵入的,推进的v.侵入,侵扰,打扰( intrude的过去式和过去分词 );把…强加于 | |
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67 confidential | |
adj.秘(机)密的,表示信任的,担任机密工作的 | |
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68 farce | |
n.闹剧,笑剧,滑稽戏;胡闹 | |
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69 calf | |
n.小牛,犊,幼仔,小牛皮 | |
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70 rogue | |
n.流氓;v.游手好闲 | |
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71 epithet | |
n.(用于褒贬人物等的)表述形容词,修饰语 | |
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72 fully | |
adv.完全地,全部地,彻底地;充分地 | |
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73 vouchsafed | |
v.给予,赐予( vouchsafe的过去式和过去分词 );允诺 | |
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74 amazement | |
n.惊奇,惊讶 | |
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75 speculative | |
adj.思索性的,暝想性的,推理的 | |
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76 ostensible | |
adj.(指理由)表面的,假装的 | |
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77 thoroughly | |
adv.完全地,彻底地,十足地 | |
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78 grumble | |
vi.抱怨;咕哝;n.抱怨,牢骚;咕哝,隆隆声 | |
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79 humiliation | |
n.羞辱 | |
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80 scapegoats | |
n.代人受过的人,替罪羊( scapegoat的名词复数 )v.使成为替罪羊( scapegoat的第三人称单数 ) | |
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81 mused | |
v.沉思,冥想( muse的过去式和过去分词 );沉思自语说(某事) | |
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82 previously | |
adv.以前,先前(地) | |
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83 accosted | |
v.走过去跟…讲话( accost的过去式和过去分词 );跟…搭讪;(乞丐等)上前向…乞讨;(妓女等)勾搭 | |
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84 oozed | |
v.(浓液等)慢慢地冒出,渗出( ooze的过去式和过去分词 );使(液体)缓缓流出;(浓液)渗出,慢慢流出 | |
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85 tornado | |
n.飓风,龙卷风 | |
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86 sarcastically | |
adv.挖苦地,讽刺地 | |
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87 clandestine | |
adj.秘密的,暗中从事的 | |
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88 privately | |
adv.以私人的身份,悄悄地,私下地 | |
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89 pointedly | |
adv.尖地,明显地 | |
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90 implicit | |
a.暗示的,含蓄的,不明晰的,绝对的 | |
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91 fumed | |
愤怒( fume的过去式和过去分词 ); 大怒; 发怒; 冒烟 | |
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92 predilection | |
n.偏好 | |
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93 loomed | |
v.隐约出现,阴森地逼近( loom的过去式和过去分词 );隐约出现,阴森地逼近 | |
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94 dwarf | |
n.矮子,侏儒,矮小的动植物;vt.使…矮小 | |
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95 retired | |
adj.隐退的,退休的,退役的 | |
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96 chamber | |
n.房间,寝室;会议厅;议院;会所 | |
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97 passionately | |
ad.热烈地,激烈地 | |
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98 complimentary | |
adj.赠送的,免费的,赞美的,恭维的 | |
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99 resuscitation | |
n.复活 | |
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100 contrived | |
adj.不自然的,做作的;虚构的 | |
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101 mediation | |
n.调解 | |
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102 speculation | |
n.思索,沉思;猜测;投机 | |
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103 gathering | |
n.集会,聚会,聚集 | |
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104 ominously | |
adv.恶兆地,不吉利地;预示地 | |
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105 sanguine | |
adj.充满希望的,乐观的,血红色的 | |
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106 temperament | |
n.气质,性格,性情 | |
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107 systematically | |
adv.有系统地 | |
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108 steadily | |
adv.稳定地;不变地;持续地 | |
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109 inflict | |
vt.(on)把…强加给,使遭受,使承担 | |
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110 jauntily | |
adv.心满意足地;洋洋得意地;高兴地;活泼地 | |
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111 heed | |
v.注意,留意;n.注意,留心 | |
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112 ruminating | |
v.沉思( ruminate的现在分词 );反复考虑;反刍;倒嚼 | |
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113 anticipation | |
n.预期,预料,期望 | |
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114 wrung | |
绞( wring的过去式和过去分词 ); 握紧(尤指别人的手); 把(湿衣服)拧干; 绞掉(水) | |
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