登陆注册
18998800000029

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
  • 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。
  • 全后魏文

    全后魏文

    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。
  • Phaedrus

    Phaedrus

    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。
  • 全金元词

    全金元词

    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。
  • 乐府传声

    乐府传声

    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
  • 重生之小小农家女

    重生之小小农家女

    前世,身体病弱,好不容易有了奇物古莲,以为有了改变命运的机会,却被小人所害,香消玉殒,只留下了年迈的父母,心中无限悔恨。醒来一看,竟然重新回到了自己四岁的小时候,从此小寒村风起云涌,寒家人踏上了完全不同的人生旅程。面对善良慈爱的爹娘和一群势利的极品亲戚,重生的寒嫣左手灵树救人命,右手神鸟降万物,身怀极品莲花空间,看破人生运势起伏,不论是刻薄亲戚还是无良邻居,休想再欺负我的家人,一家人齐心协力向前走,过上快乐的幸福生活。ps:莲莲的新书《古代上位攻略》发布了,喜欢的亲们,可以戳一下收藏了。
  • 最强前妻:情迷陆先生

    最强前妻:情迷陆先生

    一夜误会,她在他身边醒来,得到的却只是一张冰冷的结婚契约,和婚礼上他和朋友的亲吻。婚后她得到的不是欢喜,而是越来越多的无望和折磨,终于当他在生死之间选择抛弃自己的时候,她的心已经死了,选择用离婚来逃离这个让她伤心的男人。几年后阴差阳错,她却再次见到他...
  • 穿越网络遇见你

    穿越网络遇见你

    他,天生凤凰男,多磨多难,巧遇女主,甘为女主自锁一生!她,天生丽质,多才多艺,直爽善良。为了替慈父分忧早早辍学,演绎现实版孝女、才女。对男主不离不弃,既是贤内助,又是掌舵人!(暂停更新)
  • 神棍下山

    神棍下山

    他叫沈棍儿,他的身世是谜,他被世人误解是神棍,他却一笑了之。他叫沈棍儿,他也是神棍,他走下了灵华山,踏入了凡尘俗世。
  • 明月引

    明月引

    佛曰:三千繁华,弹指刹那,百年之后,一捧黄沙。有人问,圣雅阁是什么地方?女子闺阁?书楼?小院别名?亦或是皇城宫殿?都不是。圣洁高雅,嵌了‘圣’‘雅’二字,着实有些读书子会叹息,这么素洁的名字,竟然是青楼名!她是史上第一个,自己出去找男人的风尘女子。为什么?很多年以后,有人这么问她。她只淡淡道——那时我突然很想出名,后来思来想去,觉得这个办法最好不过。
  • Five Children and It

    Five Children and It

    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。
  • 我当鸟人的那几年

    我当鸟人的那几年

    俗话说的好,山不在高有仙则名,水不在深有龙则灵,人不也怕变成鸟,只要能飞就行。这貌似是废话,二十多岁的张是非这般想想到,此刻的他正望着自己这身花里胡哨的羽毛无语凝噎,他无比的抱怨自己变啥不好为啥要变成鸟。而且还不咋大。也许他并不知道,正当他慷慨激昂昂首骂街时,一场名为命运的悲喜剧,已经再一次悄悄拉开帷幕。
  • 倾宫乱:只做杀手不为妃

    倾宫乱:只做杀手不为妃

    他与她因为一次次的误解而擦肩。(慕容宇)他为了不与她擦肩,而宁愿永远站在原地。(墨尚岚)她以为,儿时小小的心里装载的,那满满的东西就是爱情。(慕容皓)她以为,与他一线牵缘,便是终生(慕容宇)她以为,一次的同床共枕,就是幸福(墨尚岚)可到了最后,她错了,他们都错了。爱情经不起时间的蹉跎,经不起怀疑的消磨,更经不起现实的打击。
  • 阳光下爱你

    阳光下爱你

    这是我的第一本小说,不喜勿喷。讲的是一对青梅竹马之间的小琐事。
  • 妃常嚣张

    妃常嚣张

    究竟是想要搞哪样?做个梦也能穿越?这个男人很眼熟啊!你是王爷就了不起吗?乖乖过来,别以为长得帅就可以随便的拈花惹草!我说过别来招惹我的,既然你不听就别怪我!怜香惜玉你经过我同意了吗?你是我的人,现在你的一切都要听我的!大爷过来让小妞抱抱原来一切都不是梦!【情节虚构,请勿模仿】