登陆注册
5234800000102

第102章 THE MEN OF ZANZIBAR(3)

"She just dropped in here one day," said Harris, "from no place in particular. Personally, I always have thought from heaven.""It's a good address," said Hemingway.

"It seems to suit her," the consul agreed. "Anyway, if she doesn't come from there, that's where she's going--just on account of the good she's done us while she's been here. She arrived four months ago with a typewriting-machine and letters to me from our consuls in Cape Town and Durban. She had done some typewriting for them. It seems that after her husband died, which was a few months after they were married, she learned to make her living by typewriting. She worked too hard and broke down, and the doctor said she must go to hot countries, the 'hotter the better.' So she's worked her way half around the world typewriting. She worked chiefly for her own consuls or for the American commission houses. Sometimes she stayed a month, sometimes only over one steamer day. But when she got here Lady Firth took such a fancy to her that she made Sir George engage her as his private secretary, and she's been here ever since."In a community so small as was that of Zanzibar the white residents saw one another every day, and within a week Hemingway had met Mrs. Adair many times. He met her at dinner, at the British agency;he met her in the country club, where the white exiles gathered for tea and tennis. He hired a launch and in her honor gave a picnic on the north coast of the island, and on three glorious and memorable nights, after different dinner-parties had ascended to the roof, he sat at her side and across the white level of the housetops looked down into the moonlit harbor.

What interest the two young people felt in each other was in no way discouraged by their surroundings. In the tropics the tender emotions are not winter killed. Had they met at home, the conventions, his own work, her social duties would have kept the progress of their interest within a certain speed limit. But they were in a place free of conventions, and the preceding eight months which Hemingway had spent in the jungle and on the plain had made the society of his fellow man, and of Mrs. Adair in particular, especially attractive.

Hemingway had no work to occupy his time, and he placed it unreservedly at the disposition of his countrywoman. In doing so it could not be said that Mrs. Adair encouraged him. Hemingway himself would have been the first to acknowledge this. From the day he met her he was conscious that always there was an intangible barrier between them. Even before she possibly could have guessed that his interest in her was more than even she, attractive as she was, had the right to expect, she had wrapped around herself an invisible mantle of defense.

There were certain speeches of his which she never heard, certain tones to which she never responded. At moments when he was complimenting himself that at last she was content to be in his company, she would suddenly rise and join the others, and he would be left wondering in what way he could possibly have offended.

He assured himself that a woman, young and attractive, in a strange land in her dependent position must of necessity be discreet, but in his conduct there certainly had been nothing that was not considerate, courteous, and straightforward.

When he appreciated that he cared for her seriously, that he was gloriously happy in caring, and proud of the way in which he cared, the fact that she persistently held him at arm's length puzzled and hurt. At first when he had deliberately set to work to make her like him he was glad to think that, owing to his reticence about himself, if she did like him it would be for himself alone and not for his worldly goods. But when he knew her better he understood that if once Mrs. Adair made up her mind to take a second husband, the fact that he was a social and financial somebody, and not, as many in Zanzibar supposed Hemingway to be, a social outcast, would make but little difference.

Nor was her manner to be explained by the fact that the majority of women found him unattractive. As to that, the pleasant burden of his experience was to the contrary. He at last wondered if there was some one else, if he had come into her life too late.

He set about looking for the man and so, he believed, he soon found him.

Of the little colony, Arthur Fearing was the man of whom Hemingway had seen the least. That was so because Fearing wished it. Like himself, Fearing was an American, young, and a bachelor, but, very much unlike Hemingway, a hermit and a recluse.

Two years before he had come to Zanzibar looking for an investment for his money. In Zanzibar there were gentlemen adventurers of every country, who were welcome to live in any country save their own.

To them Mr. Fearing seemed a heaven-sent victim. But to him their alluring tales of the fortunes that were to rise from buried treasures, lost mines, and pearl beds did not appeal. Instead he conferred with the consuls, the responsible merchants, the partners in the prosperous trading houses. After a month of "looking around" he had purchased outright the goodwill and stock of one of the oldest of the commission houses, and soon showed himself to be a most capable man of business. But, except as a man of business, no one knew him. From the dim recesses of his warehouse he passed each day to the seclusion of his bungalow in the country. And, although every one was friendly to him, he made no friends.

It was only after the arrival of Mrs. Adair that he consented to show himself, and it was soon noted that it was only when she was invited that he would appear, and that on these occasions he devoted himself entirely to her. In the presence of others, he still was shy, gravely polite, and speaking but little, and never of himself; but with Mrs. Adair his shyness seemed to leave him, and when with her he was seen to talk easily and eagerly. And, on her part, to what he said, Polly Adair listened with serious interest.

同类推荐
  • 镜换杯

    镜换杯

    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。
  • 治浙成规

    治浙成规

    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。
  • The Iron Puddler

    The Iron Puddler

    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。
  • THE RIME OF THE ANCIENT MARINER IN SEVEN PARTS

    THE RIME OF THE ANCIENT MARINER IN SEVEN PARTS

    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。
  • 佛说师子素驮娑王断肉经

    佛说师子素驮娑王断肉经

    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
  • 修罗至尊

    修罗至尊

    不成神,不为魔,只为自己活!这是一个前所未有的恢弘大世,人人如龙,如天之骄子,自出生时便能修行武力,让天地颤抖,鬼神惊伏!有少年楚天携宗门无上传承异界重生,看他如何在这个辉煌的时代,斗天骄,成为无上强者,重扬前世蜀山的威名。‘这一世,为自己活,以手中长剑护我所珍视的人,杀我一切得罪我的人。’有少年抬头望天。
  • 木蓝作妖

    木蓝作妖

    木蓝能做药,木蓝能作妖。话说,木蓝是根草,然某人闲着闲着衔着衔着一不小心就伤了嘴,竟誓要讨些补偿。
  • FBI身体语言密码(插图版)

    FBI身体语言密码(插图版)

    很多时候,我们之所以在人际交往中产生误会和 摩擦,是因为我们没有读懂对方的真实想法。而观察 和分析一个人的身体语言,则是读懂人心的利器,当 我们能够通过一个人的身体语言读懂他内心所想时, 我们与人的交流一定能够*加顺畅。《FBI身体语言 密码(插图版)》教你美国FBI超强的识人术,让你能 够**时间探知他人的内心世界。表露人真实想法的往往并非人嘴里说出来的话, 而是身体语言。一个手势,一种坐姿,一个眼神,一种声音,并 非偶然,都是内心的外在呈现。
  • 泰西水法

    泰西水法

    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。
  • THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS

    THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS

    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。
  • 塞北塞北

    塞北塞北

    作品讲述卫家和谷家四代人的恩怨,一百多年的历史,真实地描绘出塞北的风土人情。小说通过谷家男人和卫家女人的情感纠葛,表现了人们对美好爱情的热切追求和对命运的不屈抗争。作品获得第一届海峡两岸网络原创文学大赛“大佳铜奖”
  • 卫公兵法辑本

    卫公兵法辑本

    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。
  • 苦力怕娘的综漫之旅

    苦力怕娘的综漫之旅

    我是一名宅男,我因为一场离奇的事件,穿越了。世界顺序:火影忍者-待续,不喜勿喷,新手上路有一些好笑的梗群号:533975354
  • 魂巅传说

    魂巅传说

    没有灵力如何成为修士?开启命魂,从此修魂!
  • 最美存在

    最美存在

    “我吗?”环顾四周“嗯”“林兴兴”也许在我们相遇的那一刻就已经是注定好了的。