登陆注册
5264300000056

第56章 CHAPTER XI A CHANGE OF WIND(3)

Yet these nights were not altogether distasteful to Oliver. Fred had noticed for months that his room-mate no longer entered into the frolics of the club with the zest and vim that characterized the earlier days of the young Southerner's sojourn among them. Our hero had said nothing while the men had held together, and to all outward appearances had done his share not only with his singing, but in any other way in which he could help on the merriment. He had covered the space allotted to him on the walls with caricatures of the several boarders below. He had mixed the salad at Riley's the night of McFudd's farewell supper, with his sleeves rolled up to the elbows and the cook's cap on his head. He had lined up with the others at Brown's on the Bowery; drank his "crystal cocktails"--the mildest of beverages--and had solemnly marched out again with his comrades in a lock-step like a gang of convicts. He had indulged in forty-cent opera, leaning over the iron railing of the top row of the Academy of Music, and had finished the evening at Pfaff's, drinking beer and munching hardtack and pickles, and had laughed and sung in a dozen other equally absurd escapades. And yet it was as plain as daylight to Fred that Oliver's heart was no longer centred in the life about him.

The fact is, the scribe is compelled to admit, the life indulged in by these merry bohemians had begun to pall upon this most sensitive of young gentlemen.

It really had not satisfied him at all. This was not the sort of life that Mr. Crocker meant, he had said to himself after a night at Riley's when Cranch had sounded his horn so loud that the proprietor had threatened to turn the whole party into the street.

Mr. Crocker's temperament was too restful to be interested in such performances. As for himself, he was tired of it.

Nothing of all this did he keep from his mother.

The record of his likes and dislikes which formed the subject-matter of his daily letters was an absorbing study with her, and she let no variation of the weather-vane of his tastes escape her. Nor did she keep their contents from her intimate friends. She had read to Colonel Clayton one of his earlier ones, in which he had told her of the concerts and of the way Cockburn had served the brew that McFudd had concocted, and had shown him an illustration Oliver had drawn on the margin of the sheet--an outline of the china mug that held the mixture--to which that Chesterfield of a Clayton had replied:

"What did I tell you, madame--just what I expected of those Yankees--punch from mugs! Bah!"

She had, too, talked their contents over with Amos Cobb, who, since the confidence reposed in him by the Horn family, had become a frequent visitor at the house.

"There's no harm come to him yet, madame, or he wouldn't write you of what he does. Boys will be boys. Let him have his fling," the Vermonter had replied with a gleam of pleasure in his eye. "If he has the stuff in him that I think he has, he will swim out and get to higher ground; if he hasn't, better let him drown early. It will give everybody less trouble."

The dear lady had lost no sleep over these escapades.

She, too, realized that as long as Oliver poured out his heart unreservedly to her there was little to fear. In her efforts to cheer him she had sought, in her almost daily letters sent him in return, to lead his thoughts into other channels. She knew how fond he had always been of the society of women, and how necessary they were to his happiness, and she begged him to go out more. "Surely there must be some young girls in so great a city who can help to make your life happier," she wrote.

In accordance with her suggestions, he had at last put on his best clothes and had accompanied Tomlins and Fred to some very delightful houses away up in Thirty-third Street, and another on Washington Square, and still another near St. Mark's Place, where his personality and his sweet, sympathetic voice had gained him friends and most pressing invitations to call again. Some he had accepted, and some he had not--it depended very largely on his mood and upon the people whom he met. If they reminded him in any way, either in manners or appointments, of his life at home, he went again--if not, he generally stayed away.

Among these was the house of his employer, Mr. Slade, who had treated him with marked kindness, not only inviting him to his own house, but introducing him to many of his friends--an unusual civility Oliver discovered afterward--not many of the clerks being given a seat at Mr. Slade's table. "I like his brusque, hearty manner," Oliver wrote to his mother after the first visit. "His wife is a charming woman, and so are the two daughters, quite independent and fearless, and entirely different from the girls at home, but most interesting and so well bred."

Another incident, too, had greatly pleased not only Oliver and his mother, but Richard as well. It happened that a consignment of goods belonging to Morton, Slade & Co. was stored in a warehouse in Charleston, and it became necessary to send one of the clerks South to reship or sell them, the ordinary business methods being unsafe, owing to the continued rumblings of the now rapidly approaching political storm--a storm that promised to be infinitely more serious than the financial stringency. The choice had fallen on Oliver, he being a Southerner, and knowing the ways of the people. He had advised with his mother and stood ready to leave at an hour's notice, when Mr. Slade's heart failed him.

"It's too dangerous, my lad," he said to Oliver.

"I could trust you, I know, and I believe you would return safely and bring the goods or the money with you, but I should never forgive myself if anything should happen to you. I will send an older man."

And he did.

同类推荐
  • 东明闻见录

    东明闻见录

    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。
  • 吕祖指玄篇诗注

    吕祖指玄篇诗注

    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。
  • 归潜志

    归潜志

    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。
  • 贾氏谭录

    贾氏谭录

    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。
  • Letters on Sweden, Norway, and Denmark

    Letters on Sweden, Norway, and Denmark

    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
  • 红大衣

    红大衣

    创作,是以真挚清澈之心与外界交融的过程。感谢《北京文学》能够让我的中篇处女作《红大衣》问世。 《红大衣》三次易主,它的款式和颜色几经改头换面,折射着大衣主人们命运的跌宕和时代的变迁。 我以红大衣为线索,以时代变迁为背景,作人性白描,尤其是“外公”和“母亲”两代人的勇气和对理想的永不放弃。 80年前,“外公”,一个东北的土财主,有一个不能被家族接受的理想:他的女儿们长大了个个都要做医生,不靠男人吃饭。他放弃了土地进城打工,将女儿们送进学校。日本鬼子的奴役,长春被围时的饥饿,都不能让他放弃理想。
  • 迷宫街物语

    迷宫街物语

    " 绮丽学院的优等生魏星空同学,在父母失踪后变得性格孤僻。总是独来独往,她没有朋友,也不需要朋友,在这点上,倒是和班长时川有点像。在伦敦的夏令营活动中,两个死对头结成了和平友好的“互帮互助”小组,可惜啊,刚到伦敦,星空同学就给班长时川惹下了麻烦。 因为她看到了自己送给妈妈的高跟鞋!为了寻找妈妈。星空不顾危险,一步步走进了一个巨大的阴谋之中。天才迷宫设计者“银色时针”、复杂的白木兰与红木兰、新世界计划、一个个圈套接踵而至,一个个奇怪的人接连出现。什么是勇气?什么是亲情?记忆重现,原来一切早已注定。 这不仅仅是一次冒险,也是,一场寻找爱的旅程。"
  • 创业没那么难:15个成功80后的传奇故事

    创业没那么难:15个成功80后的传奇故事

    本书通过15个成功80后的传奇故事,每个故事都有生动的实例,每个创业故事都有清晰的过程,并附有“启示录”和“创业板”。15位80后用实例告诉你:创业没那么难!在互联网如此发达的今天,人们通过互联网不仅赢得了便利,更获得了创业的商机。无论是凭借电子商务起家的“七格格”曹青,还是凭借“汽车之家”被追捧的李想,都成了新时代商业发展的创业楷模。在时代不断进步的今天,创业形式也变得多种多样、多姿多彩,桌游可以“玩儿”出财富,御泥可以“抹出”金钱。可见,创业项目有了新的发展,这些创业成功的80后企业家,正是抓住了新的商机,才成就了自我。
  • The Anti-Slavery Crusade

    The Anti-Slavery Crusade

    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。
  • 大秦钜子

    大秦钜子

    秦之一世,华夏千百年兴替之起源。十数年的光阴,骊山起陵,阿房建阙,驰道通国,湘离勾连。而在无数奇迹背后,是完备的律法,是不尽的苦徭,是争鸣渐弱的百家,是生机勃勃的市井。矛盾之世,大争之时!这是一个工业设计师的大秦之旅,一个隐姓的君侯嫡孙拔起于微末的故事。观书指南:PS1.硬核时代文,自诩合理党,内附颇多干货PS2.本书保秦立场,作者君笔力一般,凡晦涩难通,词不达意,请谅解PS3.咸鱼一枚,绝不拖稿,少有爆更PS4.一个小群,群号792693720,保证没有萌妹子,只有一群杠精
  • 海明

    海明

    从海贼开始,来夺夺天下,建一份基业,过程是残酷的,是热血的,是值得一读的。
  • 异世农场兵团

    异世农场兵团

    一觉醒来,他发现他来到一个完全陌生的世界,同时他震惊的发现,他体内融合了一个农场,正是因为它才使得他来到这个陌生的世界。随后,农场和主角重生到了一个死后不久被废去武学丹田的人身上。于是,故事就这样发生了......看他如何的拥兵自重,看他如何在异世界搅风搅雨,闯出一片属于他的天地!在看他如何翻手为云覆手为雨,从此踏上一条血腥,危险之旅!成为一代异世枭雄!!!
  • 重生之影后自强

    重生之影后自强

    他成了影帝,她是个杂工!影帝方逸臣说,柳艳梅是他此生真爱!那么,十几岁就跟他在一起,为他的事业东奔西走,为他生儿育女的余婉婉又算什么?方逸臣的粉丝说,余婉婉是个死皮赖脸,倒贴的愚妇。回到16岁,余婉婉问,方逸臣,你真的爱我么?对不起,你的爱我要不起。我要考大学,我要拍广告,我要努力挣钱,这辈子我的人生绝对不能放在男人的身上。一个女人的娱乐圈奋斗史!
  • 八十一难经

    八十一难经

    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。
  • 龙朝遗传

    龙朝遗传

    看龙朝小厨师如何玩转他传奇的一生,在正邪之间游走,阴谋的背后又有怎样的隐情。一切的一切为何开始,又为什么结束?一个朝代的兴衰里又饱含了怎样九曲回肠的故事呢?一切尽在龙朝遗传。