登陆注册
18989500000008

第8章

He took his hat from its peg on the wall, and in obedience to a suddenly formed resolution left the school-room to call upon the parents of Cressy McKinstry. He was not quite certain what he should say, but, after his habit, would trust to the inspiration of the moment. At the worst he could resign a situation that now appeared to require more tact and delicacy than seemed consistent with his position, and he was obliged to confess to himself that he had lately suspected that his present occupation--the temporary expedient of a poor but clever young man of twenty--was scarcely bringing him nearer a realization of his daily dreams. For Mr. Jack Ford was a youthful pilgrim who had sought his fortune in California so lightly equipped that even in the matter of kin and advisers he was deficient. That prospective fortune had already eluded him in San Francisco, had apparently not waited for him in Sacramento, and now seemed never to have been at Indian Spring.

Nevertheless, when he was once out of sight of the school-house he lit a cigar, put his hands in his pockets, and strode on with the cheerfulness of that youth to which all things are possible.

The children had already dispersed as mysteriously and completely as they had arrived. Between him and the straggling hamlet of Indian Spring the landscape seemed to be without sound or motion.

The wooded upland or ridge on which the schoolhouse stood, half a mile further on, began to slope gradually towards the river, on whose banks, seen from that distance, the town appeared to have been scattered irregularly or thrown together hastily, as if cast ashore by some overflow--the Cosmopolitan Hotel drifting into the Baptist church, and dragging in its tail of wreckage two saloons and a blacksmith's shop; while the County Court-house was stranded in solitary grandeur in a waste of gravel half a mile away. The intervening flat was still gashed and furrowed by the remorseless engines of earlier gold-seekers.

Mr. Ford was in little sympathy with this unsuccessful record of frontier endeavor--the fortune HE had sought did not seem to lie in that direction--and his eye glanced quickly beyond it to the pine-crested hills across the river, whose primeval security was so near and yet so inviolable, or back again to the trail he was pursuing along the ridge. The latter prospect still retained its semi-savage character in spite of the occasional suburban cottages of residents, and the few outlying farms or ranches of the locality.

The grounds of the cottages were yet uncleared of underbrush; bear and catamount still prowled around the rude fences of the ranches; the late alleged experience of the infant Snyder was by no means improbable or unprecedented.

A light breeze was seeking the heated flat and river, and thrilling the leaves around him with the strong vitality of the forest. The vibrating cross-lights and tremulous chequers of shade cast by the stirred foliage seemed to weave a fantastic net around him as he walked. The quaint odors of certain woodland herbs known to his scholars, and religiously kept in their desks, or left like votive offerings on the threshold of the school-house, recalled all the primitive simplicity and delicious wildness of the little temple he had left. Even in the mischievous glances of evasive squirrels and the moist eyes of the contemplative rabbits there were faint suggestions of some of his own truants. The woods were trembling with gentle memories of the independence he had always known here--of that sweet and grave retreat now so ridiculously invaded.

He began to hesitate, with one of those revulsions of sentiment characteristic of his nature: Why should he bother himself about this girl after all? Why not make up his mind to accept her as his predecessor had done? Why was it necessary for him to find her inconsistent with his ideas of duty to his little flock and his mission to them? Was he not assuming a sense of decorum that was open to misconception? The absurdity of her school costume, and any responsibility it incurred, rested not with him but with her parents. What right had he to point it out to them, and above all how was he to do it? He halted irresolutely at what he believed was his sober second thought, but which, like most reflections that take that flattering title, was only a reaction as impulsive and illogical as the emotion that preceded it.

Mr. McKinstry's "snake rail" fence was already discernible in the lighter opening of the woods, not far from where he had halted. As he stood there in hesitation, the pretty figure and bright gown of Cressy McKinstry suddenly emerged from a more secluded trail that intersected his own at an acute angle a few rods ahead of him. She was not alone, but was accompanied by a male figure whose arm she had evidently just dislodged from her waist. He was still trying to resume his lost vantage; she was as resolutely evading him with a certain nymph-like agility, while the sound of her half-laughing, half-irate protest could be faintly heard. Without being able to identify the face or figure of her companion at that distance, he could see that it was NOT her former betrothed, Seth Davis.

A superior smile crossed his face; he no longer hesitated, but at once resumed his former path. For some time Cressy and her companion moved on quietly before him. Then on reaching the rail-fence they turned abruptly to the right, were lost for an instant in the intervening thicket, and the next moment Cressy appeared alone, crossing the meadow in a shorter cut towards the house, having either scaled the fence or slipped through some familiar gap. Her companion had disappeared. Whether they had noticed that they were observed he could not determine. He kept steadily along the trail that followed the line of fence to the lane that led directly to the farm-building, and pushed open the front gate as Cressy's light dress vanished round an angle at the rear of the house.

同类推荐
  • 大威德陀罗尼经

    大威德陀罗尼经

    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。
  • 众经目录

    众经目录

    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。
  • David Elginbrod

    David Elginbrod

    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。
  • 玉箓资度早朝仪

    玉箓资度早朝仪

    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。
  • Characteristics

    Characteristics

    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。
热门推荐
  • 那让人窒息的爱

    那让人窒息的爱

    一场事故让她失去爱别人的勇气,以为一个人独自的走过,却不知道有个人的出现。改变了命运。
  • 青帝九鉴

    青帝九鉴

    原本是小乞丐的李子虚由于得到意外的传承,利用纯灵体修炼提升自己,变强后的李子虚放出幻碟,用聚魂石聚魂,让幻碟制造肉体,重新救活霸王与神公等等,后来他得到幻碟主人与十二金玉的帮助,最终统领了仙魔两界。
  • 走出蛮荒

    走出蛮荒

    一个普通少年,立志追求武道巅峰。然而面对先天炼体缺陷,又有世家子弟的借势压人,小小少年如何走出困境?机缘巧合,凭借数术天赋获得一门不朽传承。殊途同归,拼着满腔热血闯出一条修真之路。废柴的崛起,巅峰的对决,武道极致,独步天下!
  • 重生之修真狂徒

    重生之修真狂徒

    重生在停尸间的林默却发现自己能够通灵,透视,预知未来......意外获得《修仙传》,便开启了仙途......无线组糖豆催更作品,欢迎大家点击,收藏,拜谢!小弟会努力的!~嘎嘎
  • 逆天修真之轮回镜

    逆天修真之轮回镜

    从小就是孤儿的姜云,被师傅一手养大。他只想跟师傅过着闲云野鹤的日子,不过他的命运注定不平凡。生死轮回鸿蒙炼,虚空巧得轮回镜。为了寻找他心中的答案,从此他开始讨伐天道!登修真界之巅。独战仙界群仙,大战先天六圣。最终他会得到他想要的答案么?
  • 空的城

    空的城

    我们的生活很热闹,喧嚣、繁华还有浮躁,我们看上去一点也不寂寞,我们有很多的朋友。但是我们却不能主张任何人的去留……
  • 1792权耀不列颠

    1792权耀不列颠

    那年,乔治四世正和小寡妇蜜里调油;那年,拿破仑还只是个二十二岁的愣头青;那年,还是屌丝的梅特涅正在维·也纳追求白富美。当一缕魂魄穿过两个世纪,这个波澜壮阔的时代又将走向何方?
  • 女人职场心里学(女人经典)

    女人职场心里学(女人经典)

    《女人职场心理学》主要向你阐释职场上的生存法则。总结出女性独特的生存优势。通过阅读《女人职场心理学》,每一位女性都可以找到提升自身资本的良方。如果你能够对自身的这些资本加以运用,就能开创成功职场生存法则。职场之外的身体语言相对要容易解读;而职场上的则要显得晦涩得多——人们之所以常常要掩盖或者故意克制自己的身体语言,是因为在职场上他们不得不隐藏自己的真实想法。如果你能了解这些复杂的“职场”生存法则,那么,你就为解读“社会”打下了坚实的基础;这两者在原则上基本上是一致的。
  • 仙剑梦影之惊虹初现

    仙剑梦影之惊虹初现

    天地无情,岁月沧桑。自盘古开天辟地、女娲炼石补天后,人类历史掀开了修仙的一页。亲情,爱情,友情……都将由满腔热血来守护!风起吹仙袂,白骨覆秋霜。傲然一剑过,且笑世间荒。手握仙影剑,睥睨尘世间!以一己之力,绝仙灭魔,纵横天下!
  • 我的婚姻是座牢

    我的婚姻是座牢

    办公室的门被推开,黎束发现她不举的老公,正和小三…….....