登陆注册
4714300000029

第29章

It was the first time that Verrian had come down late, and it was his novel experience to find himself in charge of Mrs. Stager at breakfast, instead of the butler and the butler's man, who had hitherto served him at the earlier hour. There were others, somewhat remote from him, at table, who were ending when he was beginning, and when they had joked themselves out of the room and away from Mrs. Stager's ministrations he was left alone to her. He had instantly appreciated a quality of motherliness in her attitude towards him, and now he was sensible of a kindly intimacy to which he rather helplessly addressed himself.

"Well, Mrs. Stager, did you see a ghost on your way to bed?"

"I don't know as I really expected to," she said. "Won't you have a few more of the buckwheats?"

"Do you think I'd better? I believe I won't. They're very tempting.

Miss Shirley makes a very good ghost," he suggested.

Mrs. Stager would not at first commit herself further than to say in bringing him the butter, "She's just up from a long fit of sickness."

She impulsively added, "She ain't hardly strong enough to be doing what she is, I tell her."

"I understood she had been ill," Verrian said. "We drove over from the station together, the other day."

"Yes," Mrs. Stager admitted. "Kind of a nervous breakdown, I believe.

But she's got an awful spirit. Mrs. Westangle don't want her to do all she is doing."

Verrian looked at her in surprise. He had not expected that of the India-rubber nature he had attributed to Mrs. Westangle. In view of Mrs.

Stager's privity to the unimagined kindliness of his hostess, he relaxed himself in a further interest in Miss Shirley, as if it would now be safe. "She's done splendidly, so far," he said, meaning the girl.

"I'm glad Mrs. Westangle appreciates her work."

"I guess," Mrs. Stager said, "that if it hadn't been for you at the snow-fight-- She got back from getting ready for it, that morning, almost down sick, she was afraid so it was going to fail."

"I didn't do anything," Verrian said, putting the praise from him.

Mrs. Stager lowered her voice in an octave of deeper confidentiability.

"You got the note? I put it under, and I didn't know."

"Oh yes, I got it," Verrian said, sensible of a relief, which he would not assign to any definite reason, in knowing that Miss Shirley had not herself put it under his door. But he now had to take up another burden in the question whether Miss Shirley were of an origin so much above that of her confidant that she could have a patrician fearlessness in making use of her, or were so near Mrs. Stager's level of life that she would naturally turn to her for counsel and help. Miss Shirley had the accent, the manners, and the frank courage of a lady; but those things could be learned; they were got up for the stage every day.

Verrian was roused from the muse he found he had fallen into by hearing Mrs. Stager ask, "Won't you have some more coffee?"

"No, thank you," he said. And now he rose from the table, on which he dreamily dropped his napkin, and got his hat and coat and went out for a walk. He had not studied the art of fiction so long, in the many private failures that had preceded his one public success, without being made to observe that life sometimes dealt in the accidents and coincidences which his criticism condemned as too habitually the resource of the novelist.

Hitherto he had disdained them for this reason; but since his serial story was off his hands, and he was beginning to look about him for fresh material, he had doubted more than once whether his severity was not the effect of an unjustifiable prejudice.

It struck him now, in turning the corner of the woodlot above the meadow where the snow-battle had taken place, and suddenly finding himself face to face with Miss Shirley, that nature was in one of her uninventive moods and was helping herself out from the old stock-in-trade of fiction.

All the same, he felt a glow of pleasure, which was also a glow of pity; for while Miss Shirley looked, as always, interesting, she look tired, too, with a sort of desperate air which did not otherwise account for itself. She had given, at sight of him, a little start, and a little "Oh!" dropped from her lips, as if it had been jostled from them. She made haste to go on, with something like the voluntary hardiness of the courage that plucks itself from the primary emotion of fear, "You are going down to try the skating?"

"Do I look it, without skates?"

"You may be going to try the sliding," she returned. "I'm afraid there won't be much of either for long. This soft air is going to make havoc of my plans for to-morrow."

"That's too bad of it. Why not hope for a hard freeze to-night? You might as well. The weather has been known to change its mind. You might even change your plans."

"No, I can't do that. I can't think of anything else. It's to bridge over the day that's left before Seeing Ghosts. If it does freeze, you'll come to Mrs. Westangle's afternoon tea on the pond?"

"I certainly shall. How is it to be worked?"

"She's to have her table on a platform, with runners, in a bower of evergreen boughs, and be pushed about, and the people are to skate up for the tea. There are to be tea and chocolate, and two girls to pour, just as in real life. It isn't a very dazzling idea, but I thought it might do; and Mrs. Westangle is so good-natured. Now, if the thermometer will do its part!"

"I am sure it will," Verrian said, but a glance at the gray sky did not confirm him in his prophetic venture. The snow was sodden under foot; a breath from the south stirred the pines to an Aeolian response and moved the stiff, dry leaves of the scrub-oaks. A sapsucker was marking an accurate circle of dots round the throat of a tall young maple, and enjoying his work in a low, guttural soliloquy, seemingly, yet, dismayingly, suggestive of spring.

"It's lovely, anyway," she said, following his glance with an upward turn of her face.

同类推荐
  • 世说新语

    世说新语

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 铁眉三巴掌禅师语录

    铁眉三巴掌禅师语录

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • EGYPT

    EGYPT

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Swan Song

    Swan Song

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说十八泥犁经

    佛说十八泥犁经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 千年风月

    千年风月

    因为她偷了风月石,他携着别人的手走向婚姻圣殿,于是她吃下了万劫不复的情花,本要化成他心里永恒的爱恋,却得他以命相换。千年风月长情,转世却成孽海怨花...  
  • 入我魔道

    入我魔道

    人间几多风雨,道上历经磨难。谁能真正的逍遥在这世间,修道又是否真的能够通达长生,时至今日仍是未能见到真正的仙者,只留下这无数的传说罢了。我们都是凡夫俗子,为了生存而在不断的努力,到最后早已忘却了自己的初心究竟是什么,这里是我们每一个人的传说。
  • 末世宠物供应商

    末世宠物供应商

    “大灾变”之后人类文明陷入瘫痪,直到五年之后才稳定下来,但地球却已物是人非,人口骤降,怪物横行。侥幸活下来的叶篁意外发现自己居然能驯养这些怪物!
  • 水域精灵的奥秘(我的动物朋友)

    水域精灵的奥秘(我的动物朋友)

    海洋的面积占全球总面积的2/3,因为海洋面积远远大于陆地面积,故有人将地球称为“大水球”。生命源于水,所以海洋是所有生物最古老的栖地。水生动物最常见的是鱼,此外还有肠腔动物,如海葵、海蜇、珊瑚虫;软体动物,如乌贼、章鱼;甲克动物,如虾、蟹;其他动物,如海豚、鲸、龟等其他生物。鲸用肺呼吸,所以属于哺乳动物。而不是鱼类。
  • 仙凡重连

    仙凡重连

    生活不止眼前的苟且,还有诗和远方。当高三狗徐一凡踏上了太上老君一众仙人的贼船之后,眼前的苟且已然消失;而诗和远方也变成了来自诸天万界的无尽功法和经藏法宝,还有那条不知其修远兮的仙凡重连之路。
  • 既不能反抗那就闭眼享受

    既不能反抗那就闭眼享受

    从头到尾我只是一颗棋子……我以为努力过他会懂我以为只要我付出的够多他就能多看我一眼谁曾想不论我多努力永远也比不上她。
  • 医仙索宠,战神师父举高高

    医仙索宠,战神师父举高高

    【1v1身心健康甜宠文(冰山师父只为调皮彪悍小徒儿绽放温柔)】神族奇报:神族第一医仙,籁乾尊神的娇妻晱卿兰还童了!看着怀中白嫩的小团子举着一双胖乎乎的小手张牙舞爪,籁乾尊神一双剑眉蹙了蹙:嗯,先养着吧。一千年后,白嫩的小团子终于长回曾经的模样。某尊神觉得:嗯,是时候吃抹干净了。“师父,你又来为我暖床啦!”某小徒主动投进某尊神怀里,殊不知:羊入虎口……
  • 你是我的星光之海

    你是我的星光之海

    他,是个阳光灿烂爱笑的大男孩。她,是个美丽,让人觉得不食人间烟火的小女生。因为弟弟的原因,他与她相识,相恋。却因为一场突如其来的车祸,上帝永远的从她身边,带走了她年华中最美好的初恋。
  • 美丽的大森林

    美丽的大森林

    原始大森林,是个多么吸引人的世界啊!没有去过那里的人们都会猜想,那儿一定是个很神秘有趣的地方。千年老树高耸人云,奇花异草香气扑鼻,色彩缤纷的蝴蝶、飞蛾、群蜂尽情飞舞,狗熊、老虎、金钱豹、金雕、飞龙等各类珍禽奇兽乐在其中。故事讲述的是在齐鲁大地读小学二年级的大平、二平跟随妈妈来到东北某林区小镇的姥姥家过暑假,参加了镇小学组织的课外夏令营,昆虫小组和摄影小组活动。于是他们随着小表姐等人便走进了美丽而神秘的原始大森林。通过一系列如,夜进大森林,给狗熊拍照,捉鸟和引鸟等生动、惊险有趣的故事情节,重点刻俩了大平、二平、参花等孩子的不同性格特点。
  • 九秘传说

    九秘传说

    少年凌空,检查特殊灵根,偶得神秘物品,获得九秘之一,开启逆天武魂,从此走上逆天之路。横扫诸天强者,称霸万界。