登陆注册
19460600000081

第81章

"At the Dining-rooms," said Mrs. Wragge. "He was the hungriest and the loudest to wait upon of the lot of 'em. I made more mistakes with him than I did with all the rest of them put together. He used to swear--oh, didn't he use to swear! When he left off swearing at me he married me. There was others wanted me besides him. Bless you, I had my pick. Why not? When you have a trifle of money left you that you didn't expect, if that don't make a lady of you, what does? Isn't a lady to have her pick? I had my trifle of money, and I had my pick, and I picked the captain--I did. He was the smartest and the shortest of them all. He took care of me and my money. I'm here, the money's gone. Don't you put that towel down on the table--he won't have that! Don't move his razors--don't, please, or I shall forget which is which. I've got to remember which is which to-morrow morning. Bless you, the captain don't shave himself! He had me taught. I shave him. I do his hair, and cut his nails--he's awfully particular about his nails. So he is about his trousers. And his shoes. And his newspaper in the morning. And his breakfasts, and lunches, and dinners, and teas--" She stopped, struck by a sudden recollection, looked about her, observed the tattered old book on the floor, and clasped her hands in despair. "I've lost the place!" she exclaimed helplessly. "Oh, mercy, what will become of me! I've lost the place.""Never mind," said Magdalen; "I'll soon find the place for you again."She picked up the book, looked into the pages, and found that the object of Mrs. Wragge's anxiety was nothing more important than an old-fashioned Treatise on the Art of Cookery, reduced under the usual heads of Fish, Flesh, and Fowl, and containing the customary series of recipes. Turning over the leaves, Magdalen came to one particular page, thickly studded with little drops of moisture half dry. "Curious!" she said. "If this was anything but a cookery-book, I should say somebody had been crying over it.""Somebody?" echoed Mrs. Wragge, with a stare of amazement. "It isn't somebody--it's Me. Thank you kindly, that's the place, sure enough. Bless you, I'm used to crying over it. You'd cry, too, if you had to get the captain's dinners out of it. As sure as ever I sit down to this book the Buzzing in my head begins again. Who's to make it out? Sometimes I think I've got it, and it all goes away from me. Sometimes I think I haven't got it, and it all comes back in a heap. Look here! Here's what he's ordered for his breakfast to-morrow: 'Omelette with Herbs. Beat up two eggs with a little water or milk, salt, pepper, chives, and parsley. Mince small.'--There! mince small! How am I to mince small when it's all mixed up and running? 'Put a piece of butter the size of your thumb into the frying-pan.'--Look at my thumb, and look at yours! whose size does she mean? 'Boil, but not brown.'--If it mustn't be brown, what color must it be? She won't tell me; she expects me to know, and I don't. 'Pour in the omelette.'--There! I can do that. 'Allow it to set, raise it round the edge; when done, turn it over to double it.'--Oh, the number of times I turned it over and doubled it in my head, before you came in to-night! 'Keep it soft; put the dish on the frying-pan, and turn it over.' Which am I to turn over--oh, mercy, try the cold towel again, and tell me which--the dish or the frying-pan?""Put the dish on the frying-pan," said Magdalen; "and then turn the frying-pan over. That is what it means, I think.""Thank you kindly," said Mrs. Wragge, "I want to get it into my head; please say it again."Magdalen said it again.

"And then turn the frying-pan over," repeated Mrs. Wragge, with a sudden burst of energy. "I've got it now! Oh, the lots of omelettes all frying together in my head; and all frying wrong! Much obliged, I'm sure. You've put me all right again: I'm only a little tired with talking. And then turn the frying-pan, then turn the frying-pan, then turn the frying-pan over. It sounds like poetry, don't it?"Her voice sank, and she drowsily closed her eyes. At the same moment the door of the room below opened, and the captain's mellifluous bass notes floated upstairs, charged with the customary stimulant to his wife's faculties.

"Mrs. Wragge!" cried the captain. "Mrs. Wragge!"She started to her feet at that terrible summons. "Oh, what did he tell me to do?" she asked, distractedly. "Lots of things, and I've forgotten them all!""Say you have done them when he asks you," suggested Magdalen. "They were things for me--things I don't want. I remember all that is necessary. My room is the front room on the third floor. Go downstairs and say I am coming directly."She took up the candle and pushed Mrs. Wragge out on the landing. "Say I am coming directly," she whispered again--and went upstairs by herself to the third story.

The room was small, close, and very poorly furnished. In former days Miss Garth would have hesitated to offer such a room to one of the servants at Combe-Raven. But it was quiet; it gave her a few minutes alone; and it was endurable, even welcome, on that account. She locked herself in and walked mechanically, with a woman's first impulse in a strange bedroom, to the rickety little table and the dingy little looking-glass. She waited there for a moment, and then turned away with weary contempt. "What does it matter how pale I am?" she thought to herself. "Frank can't see me--what does it matter now!"She laid aside her cloak and bonnet, and sat down to collect herself. But the events of the day had worn her out. The past, when she tried to remember it, only made her heart ache. The future, when she tried to penetrate it, was a black void. She rose again, and stood by the uncurtained window--stood looking out, as if there was some hidden sympathy for her own desolation in the desolate night.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 第二都域

    第二都域

    本书不是所谓的玄幻,都市,爱情小说,与此无关,本书主要讲述现实生活的种种不平等和虚伪的事情,本书的主线是揭露与吐槽,观点绝对独到和犀利,希望支持!
  • 济阴纲目

    济阴纲目

    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。
  • 日久必婚:总裁追爱小野妻

    日久必婚:总裁追爱小野妻

    他是矜贵斯文的冷俊总裁,却偏偏喜欢上了一个泼辣野蛮的丫头。“吻我。”许诺闭着眸子,一切准备就绪,就等着顾霓裳吻他。一个吻而已,他又没说规定吻那里。“可以了。”顾霓裳轻轻的亲了一下许诺的脸,得意的偷笑。
  • 每天读点世界历史

    每天读点世界历史

    本书以人类历史为主干,取材于历史,又尊重历史,按照主题划分的形式进行编排,以通俗易懂的散文化表述,追求一种和谐而有趣味的阅读快感。它以时间为经,以历史名人和重大历史事件为纬,通过一个个栩栩如生的历史人物勾画人类文明发展的踪迹,通过一个个精彩鲜活的历史故事展现五千年世界历史风貌。
  • 贫总裁的富甜心

    贫总裁的富甜心

    七年前,他第一次见到她,是被她爸爸以贫民孩子的身份带到她的家。当那个男人把他领到她面前,介绍他以后就是她的哥哥,她沉默了许久,就在他以为她将要嘲笑他,讽刺他,她突然跑到自己面前,小手拉上他的脏兮兮手,开心的说到,我有哥哥了,我有哥哥了﹗拉着自己在硕大的院子里跑来跑去,望着她娇小的背影,他在心底默默的发誓,此生此世,护她一世!转眼间,七年过去。再次相见当初的女孩已成长成如今的少女,当初的男孩也拥有属于自己的势力,“哥哥,你,还认识我吗?”不知现在的你,还能否遵守当年的誓言?
  • 《萌女闯江湖》

    《萌女闯江湖》

    【小白,你不要低头含情脉脉的看着人家~(≧▽≦)/~啦啦啦】【为什么】【我担心你脑袋里面的水会漏进我的脑袋】。。。。。。。
  • 佛说造塔延命功德经

    佛说造塔延命功德经

    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。
  • 废柴小姐要逆天

    废柴小姐要逆天

    她本是无所不能的绝世神偷,却穿越到一个傻子加废柴的身上,有没有搞错?这也就罢了,还被许配给太监加断袖的王爷,有没有搞错?谁说她是废材了,老娘就让变成太监。他是太监,那夜夜宠她入骨的男人又是谁?【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 禁镜

    禁镜

    她身着鹅黄色长裙,手拿一把十二骨薄扇,三千青丝被一个泛着木香的古木簪子简单挽起,双目如星,轻动流转间,带着千里冰芒寒彻人心,又有轻轻玩味之意。她的一颦一蹙似如画卷,又胜水墨,宛如仙袛。不经意间便带着勾魂摄魄迷惑众生。
  • 校草的纯爱:丫头你是我的唯一

    校草的纯爱:丫头你是我的唯一

    她,今年十七岁,是一个普通的女生,小时候经常被其他人欺负,从那时起她就下定决心要去学跆拳道。现在获得黑带九段。在学跆拳道期间,她遇到两个也是学习跆拳道的女生,她们有着共同话题无话不谈。曾经在一分钟内打到20个大汉。在学校被誉为:“百何女神”这三人不像其他女生一样浓妆艳抹,每个人都长得特别清纯。在一座新的高中,这三个清纯的姑娘将会发生什么有趣的事情呢?她们会不会遇到自己的幸福呢?请大家多多关注这本书!