登陆注册
5260500000042

第42章 II(1)

The next morning Claude stepped off the train at Frankfort and had his breakfast at the station before the town was awake. His family were not expecting him, so he thought he would walk home and stop at the mill to see Enid Royce. After all, old friends were best.

He left town by the low road that wound along the creek. The willows were all out in new yellow leaves, and the sticky cotton-wood buds were on the point of bursting. Birds were calling everywhere, and now and then, through the studded willow wands, flashed the dazzling wing of a cardinal.

All over the dusty, tan-coloured wheatfields there was a tender mist of green,--millions of little fingers reaching up and waving lightly in the sun. To the north and south Claude could see the corn-planters, moving in straight lines over the brown acres where the earth had been harrowed so fine that it blew off in clouds of dust to the roadside. When a gust of wind rose, gay little twisters came across the open fields, corkscrews of powdered earth that whirled through the air and suddenly fell again. It seemed as if there were a lark on every fence post, singing for everything that was dumb; for the great ploughed lands, and the heavy horses in the rows, and the men guiding the horses.

Along the roadsides, from under the dead weeds and wisps of dried bluestem, the dandelions thrust up their clean, bright faces. If Claude happened to step on one, the acrid smell made him think of Mahailey, who had probably been out this very morning, gouging the sod with her broken butcher knife and stuffing dandelion greens into her apron. She always went for greens with an air of secrecy, very early, and sneaked along the roadsides stooping close to the ground, as if she might be detected and driven away, or as if the dandelions were wild things and had to be caught sleeping.

Claude was thinking, as he walked, of how he used to like to come to mill with his father. The whole process of milling was mysterious to him then; and the mill house and the miller's wife were mysterious; even Enid was, a little--until he got her down in the bright sun among the cat-tails. They used to play in the bins of clean wheat, watch the flour coming out of the hopper and get themselves covered with white dust.

Best of all he liked going in where the water-wheel hung dripping in its dark cave, and quivering streaks of sunlight came in through the cracks to play on the green slime and the spotted jewel-weed growing in the shale. The mill was a place of sharp contrasts; bright sun and deep shade, roaring sound and heavy, dripping silence. He remembered how astonished he was one day, when he found Mr. Royce in gloves and goggles, cleaning the millstones, and discovered what harmless looking things they were. The miller picked away at them with a sharp hammer until the sparks flew, and Claude still had on his hand a blue spot where a chip of flint went under the skin when he got too near.

Jason Royce must have kept his mill going out of sentiment, for there was not much money in it now. But milling had been his first business, and he had not found many things in life to be sentimental about. Sometimes one still came upon him in dusty miller's clothes, giving his man a day off. He had long ago ceased to depend on the risings and fallings of Lovely Creek for his power, and had put in a gasoline engine. The old dam now lay "like a holler tooth," as one of his men said, grown up with weeds and willow-brush.

Mr. Royce's family affairs had never gone as well as his business. He had not been blessed with a son, and out of five daughters he had succeeded in bringing up only two. People thought the mill house damp and unwholesome. Until he built a tenant's cottage and got a married man to take charge of the mill, Mr. Royce was never able to keep his millers long. They complained of the gloom of the house, and said they could not get enough to eat. Mrs. Royce went every summer to a vegetarian sanatorium in Michigan, where she learned to live on nuts and toasted cereals. She gave her family nourishment, to be sure, but there was never during the day a meal that a man could look forward to with pleasure, or sit down to with satisfaction. Mr. Royce usually dined at the hotel in town. Nevertheless, his wife was distinguished for certain brilliant culinary accomplishments.

Her bread was faultless. When a church supper was toward, she was always called upon for her wonderful mayonnaise dressing, or her angel-food cake,--sure to be the lightest and spongiest in any assemblage of cakes.

A deep preoccupation about her health made Mrs. Royce like a woman who has a hidden grief, or is preyed upon by a consuming regret. It wrapped her in a kind of insensibility. She lived differently from other people, and that fact made her distrustful and reserved. Only when she was at the sanatorium, under the care of her idolized doctors, did she feel that she was understood and surrounded by sympathy.

Her distrust had communicated itself to her daughters and in countless little ways had coloured their feelings about life.

They grew up under the shadow of being "different," and formed no close friendships. Gladys Farmer was the only Frankfort girl who had ever gone much to the mill house. Nobody was surprised when Caroline Royce, the older daughter, went out to China to be a missionary, or that her mother let her go without a protest. The Royce women were strange, anyhow, people said; with Carrie gone, they hoped Enid would grow up to be more like other folk. She dressed well, came to town often in her car, and was always ready to work for the church or the public library.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 哈佛优等生最欣赏的200个人生故事

    哈佛优等生最欣赏的200个人生故事

    这是一本关于哈佛人生智慧的书,从做人、做事、性格、交往和处世等方面遴选了哈佛优等生最欣赏的200个人生故事。阅读这些经典的人生故事,可以从中感触到哈佛精神的精髓所在,能够感受到自己是在与哈佛大师进行深层的沟通。不可否认,这些人生故事就像哈佛给予的人生忠告,品味它们,就好像浸润在智者的思想里……
  • 少年少年

    少年少年

    我用布包了铁锅里的青草和盐,让细君老婶拿着烫膝盖。细君老婶走的时候,要了剩下的青草,说回去能自己找来治了。阿爸一直盯着我,我突然不怕他的目光了,抬起脸看他。那件事以后,我第一次这么看阿爸。我又想起那件事,可好像不那么害怕了,不那么怕记得了。怪的是,我不怕记得的时候,就有点记不得那件事了。像有块橡皮擦,把那件事一点点擦掉,写上别的事,就是有那件事,上面也盖了别的事。
  • 相门毒妃不好惹

    相门毒妃不好惹

    堂堂21世纪顶级军医,穿越成一个傻子美人,被迫嫁个恶名在外的王爷。亲生父亲想要将她再次毒傻,姨娘背后的宫中势力想要杀了她,还有王府废院中的秘密……传闻她的王爷夫君有吸食人血的癖好,她却只发现一个苦逼男人的苦逼中毒史。看她如何在这王府深苑中步步为营,斗贱人救夫君。什么,她只是看他长得好看才勉强治一治,怎么这个家伙病好了就忘恩负义地赖上她!--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 历代山水诗(中国历代诗分类集成)

    历代山水诗(中国历代诗分类集成)

    山水诗,作为诗歌领域中诸多品类的一种,历来就受到人们的喜爱。它篇目繁富,内容广泛,名篇佳作,美不胜收。本书从中收集的诗歌多为精品。每篇作品都有【注释】和【鉴赏】,以供读者参考。本书在编选过程中,曾参阅了前人和今人的研究成果,多所受益,表示衷心地感谢。由于水平所限,资料不足,疏漏缺失之处,在所难免,热切期望专家与读者不吝指教。
  • 倾绝天下:千面毒王逆天妃

    倾绝天下:千面毒王逆天妃

    她,魂穿到妖孽丛生的古代。他,面皮撕下一层又一层,亦真亦幻。到底哪个是真实的他,与之匹敌的她毒术天下,看小狐狸般的毒妃如何翻手为云,覆手为雨,看她如何斗妖夫,以正妻威。待到她与他携手天下,应验三生三世的预言,看她如何抗天命,与他倾绝天下。
  • 邪魅丞相狂妄妻

    邪魅丞相狂妄妻

    在白夜飞眼里,一切没有对或错,只有随心所欲。他可因一句话不顺耳,让人永无翻身之日,也可因一时兴起,说动皇帝发粮赈灾,世人对他毁誉参半、褒贬不一,他全没当回事,最近,正感觉到日子无聊的他,竟然有一个女人送上门要刺杀他那么,他不玩个痛快怎么能对得起自己呢?小姐,你只能自求多福了!一见钟情啊……原来这就是一见钟情的滋味呀!既想蹂躏她,又见不得她受虐的心情……真是有趣呢!官大如何?权大势大又如何?怎比得上挑战这个能引起自己兴趣的女人好呢太好了!好久没这么有斗志了,是先吃了她?玩玩她?还是……就这么办吧!他决定等著她……主动慢慢爬过来,看她可怜兮兮地跪伏在他脚边求他帮她太残忍了?不,怎么会残忍呢?瞧她瞧她,都到这个时候了还不认输也许……也许他该好好想想了,想想如何成为她心头一块割舍不了的肉……真是愈来愈有挑战性了!呃,始料未及,始料未及呀!他说,她总是教他心痒难耐……尤其是那骨子傲气他还要她爱他入骨……在她贫乏的情趣之下!心痒难耐?爱他入骨?可她竟然告诉他:“就那么一丁点的喜欢,不会再多,这种喜欢恰恰好。”他微微怔住,不知道她又在耍什么把戏?就……就一丁点感情?不知为何,他内心一股恼意升起。亲们,记得,收藏,投票,留言呀**********************************推荐老婆橘子香水的《古代皇帝追妻记》写的很幽默,很有味道,亲们支持一下推荐月月亲亲的《绝代女王爷》月月的女主强大呀,强大呀1推荐花若靥亲亲的《盗墓俏太后》推荐天使的叛逆亲的《无情的总裁》推荐雪柯亲亲的《混世魔王的娇妻》推荐殇然亲亲的《冷宫囚后》推荐梦熙儿《皇宫宝贝之可爱五公主》推荐海蓝亲亲的《弃后的诱惑》推荐亲亲野蛮DE灵《皇帝的调皮仙女》推荐依蓝亲亲的《风云后宫》推荐霓儿亲亲的《贡品皇后》推荐萷丫亲亲的《狼入室--梅妃》推荐星星等等的《侍寝仙妃》推荐雪若蓝亲亲的《豪门爱情》推荐晴语亲亲的《暴王【诱】奴妃》推荐大明格格亲亲的《寡妇,不当》推荐梦伊蝶亲亲的《黑道教父诱娇妻》推荐思丝亲亲的《极品囧女》———————————————————————————推荐新文《你丫抢婚有完没完》身为京城首富的秦府,一直有个最大的秘密那就是------秦老爷竟穷地连女儿都养不活了!
  • 所以青梅

    所以青梅

    想写个娇纵无脑但又不那么讨人厌的角色,以往看过的小说中,这类性格的人大都是属于恶毒女配,但是想想,如果是这样一个角色,正好她有一个外表纯善正直,内里却黑透了的爱慕者,并且这个恶毒女配还对爱慕者各种欺负加无理取闹,等到有一天,恶毒女配嫁给了这个爱慕者,就好玩了。不过文笔有限,写不太出来这种感觉,我只能尽量。这篇文已经快完结了,剩下的基本都是一些日常,但也没多少章,最多十几二十章的样子,接下来我要开始更新武林那篇。这篇文本来因为快完结都在犹豫要不要上架,但是当初寄签约合同的快递费还要了我八块钱,我就想挣回来这八块钱,但是到目前为止还没有挣回来,也是十分忧伤呢,反正接下来也没什么大的波折了,小伙伴们就把结婚当做完结也可以,后期我会不定期更新。目前在写武林,等我存几章我就开始恢复更新。
  • 陪你数星星

    陪你数星星

    …“纵使生活没那么容易,我还是想把你,放在未来里,一生欢喜,不为世俗所及。”林故初永远都会和易南肆在一起,永远永远。从何时起我变得挑剔,是见过你清澈瞳孔里我的倒影,还是见过你蜜糖味柔软的笑意。身边来往的人很多,也曾有人为我驻足,可是啊,不是你不行。世界灿烂盛大,总有你的家。“世界没你想象的那么好世界也没你想象的那么坏你过来来我身边月亮不抱你时光摧毁你可我爱你。”你是这世间最可爱的小星星,我爱了整个宇宙只为和你碰头。想在夜晚变成星星,偷吻你的眼睛。“易先生啊,我真的超想和你有以后。”我喜欢的少年打天上来,他无意掀翻烛火,点燃我双眸盛满的暮色。-“世界很暗,然后你来了,带着星星月亮…”
  • Harold Pinter Plays 2

    Harold Pinter Plays 2

    The second volume of Harold Pinter's collected work includes The wkkk.net CaretakerIt was with this play that Harold Pinter had his first major success. The obsessive caretaker, Davies, is a classic comic creation, and his uneasy relationship with the enigmatic Aston and Mick a landmark in twentieth-century drama.'The play remains a masterpiece.' Daily Telegraph The Collection This one-act play for television explores the sexual manoeuvres between two couples in the clothing trade. 'Taps the adrenal flow of contemporary guilt and anxiety.' Time The Lover Richard and Sarah conduct themselves with apparent respectability in the mornings, whilst living out a sequence of erotic rituals in the afternoons. 'Beautifully written... the sexiest play I remember seeing on the television.' Sunday Times The volume also includes Night School and The Dwarfs, plus five revue sketches written during the same period.
  • 帅哥王子

    帅哥王子

    《帅哥王子》收录了若干篇有关王子的童话故事,大部分是中外名家名作,也包括部分民间童话。在本书的故事中,《白熊王子》讲述的是一个小姑娘被白熊娶了回去,只有在晚上才能变成人,但是因为这位姑娘的好奇,让白熊身上的诅咒生效,白熊被女巫抓走了。原来白熊是一个王子,而这个小姑娘也开始为了找回白熊王子而奔波,最后找回王子。《快乐王子》讲述的是快乐王子和小燕子为帮助穷人而牺牲了自己的故事。快乐王子活着的时候,在王宫里每天都过得非常开心,从不知道忧愁和贫穷是什么。