登陆注册
19847000000024

第24章

"I think he's the greatest lark; but he's awfully nice to me. Jock calls him the last of the Stoic'uns."A voice called from old Heythorp's den:

"Phyllis!" It had a particular ring, that voice, as if coming from beautifully formed red lips, of which the lower one must curve the least bit over; it had, too, a caressing vitality, and a kind of warm falsity.

The girl threw a laughing look back over her shoulder, and vanished through the door into the room.

Bob Pillin remained with his back to the fire and his puppy round eyes fixed on the air that her figure had last occupied. He was experiencing a sensation never felt before. Those travels with a lady of Spain, charitably conceded him by old Heythorp, had so far satisfied the emotional side of this young man; they had stopped short at Brighton and Scarborough, and been preserved from even the slightest intrusion of love. A calculated and hygienic career had caused no anxiety either to himself or his father; and this sudden swoop of something more than admiration gave him an uncomfortable choky feeling just above his high round collar, and in the temples a sort of buzzing--those first symptoms of chivalry. A man of the world does not, however, succumb without a struggle; and if his hat had not been out of reach, who knows whether he would not have left the house hurriedly, saying to himself: "No, no, my boy; Millicent Villas is hardly your form, when your intentions are honourable"?

For somehow that round and laughing face, bob of glistening hair, those wide-opened grey eyes refused to awaken the beginnings of other intentions--such is the effect of youth and innocence on even the steadiest young men. With a kind of moral stammer, he was thinking:

'Can I--dare I offer to see them to their tram? Couldn't I even nip out and get the car round and send them home in it? No, I might miss them--better stick it out here! What a jolly laugh! What a tipping face--strawberries and cream, hay, and all that! Millicent Villas!'

And he wrote it on his cuff.

The door was opening; he heard that warm vibrating voice: "Come along, Phyllis!"--the girl's laugh so high and fresh: "Right-o!

Coming!" And with, perhaps, the first real tremor he had ever known, he crossed to the front door. All the more chivalrous to escort them to the tram without a hat! And suddenly he heard: " I've got your hat, young man!" And her mother's voice, warm, and simulating shock:

"Phyllis, you awful gairl! Did you ever see such an awful gairl;Mr.---"

"Pillin, Mother."

And then--he did not quite know how--insulated from the January air by laughter and the scent of fur and violets, he was between them walking to their tram. It was like an experience out of the "Arabian Nights," or something of that sort, an intoxication which made one say one was going their way, though one would have to come all the way back in the same beastly tram. Nothing so warming had ever happened to him as sitting between them on that drive, so that he forgot the note in his pocket, and his desire to relieve the anxiety of the "old man," his father. At the tram's terminus they all got out. There issued a purr of invitation to come and see them some time; a clear: "Jock'll love to see you!" A low laugh: "You awful gairl!" And a flash of cunning zigzagged across his brain. Taking off his hat, he said:

"Thanks awfully; rather!" and put his foot back on the step of the tram. Thus did he delicately expose the depths of his chivalry!

"Oh! you said you were going our way! What one-ers you do tell!

Oh!" The words were as music; the sight of those eyes growing rounder, the most perfect he had ever seen; and Mrs. Larne's low laugh, so warm yet so preoccupied, and the tips of the girl's fingers waving back above her head. He heaved a sigh, and knew no more till he was seated at his club before a bottle of champagne. Home! Not he! He wished to drink and dream. "The old man" would get his news all right to-morrow!

3The words: "A Mrs. Larne to see you, sir," had been of a nature to astonish weaker nerves. What had brought her here? She knew she mustn't come! Old Heythorp had watched her entrance with cynical amusement. The way she whiffed herself at that young pup in passing, the way her eyes slid round! He had a very just appreciation of his son's widow; and a smile settled deep between his chin tuft and his moustache. She lifted his hand, kissed it, pressed it to her splendid bust, and said:

"So here I am at last, you see. Aren't you surprised?"Old Heythorp, shook his head.

"I really had to come and see you, Guardy; we haven't had a sight of you for such an age. And in this awful weather! How are you, dear old Guardy?""Never better." And, watching her green-grey eyes, he added:

"Haven't a penny for you!"

Her face did not fall; she gave her feather-laugh.

"How dreadful of you to think I came for that! But I am in an awful fix, Guardy.""Never knew you not to be."

"Just let me tell you, dear; it'll be some relief. I'm having the most terrible time."She sank into a low chair, disengaging an overpowering scent of violets, while melancholy struggled to subdue her face and body.

"The most awful fix. I expect to be sold up any moment. We may be on the streets to-morrow. I daren't tell the children; they're so happy, poor darlings. I shall be obliged to take Jock away from school. And Phyllis will have to stop her piano and dancing; it's an absolute crisis. And all due to those Midland Syndicate people.

I've been counting on at least two hundred for my new story, and the wretches have refused it."With a tiny handkerchief she removed one tear from the corner of one eye. "It is hard, Guardy; I worked my brain silly over that story.">From old Heythorp came a mutter which sounded suspiciously like:

"Rats!"

Heaving a sigh, which conveyed nothing but the generosity of her breathing apparatus, Mrs. Larne went on:

"You couldn't, I suppose, let me have just one hundred?""Not a bob."

She sighed again, her eyes slid round the room; then in her warm voice she murmured:

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 为君解罗裳:妖女倾天下

    为君解罗裳:妖女倾天下

    这东南国,谁人不知,谁人不晓,这要嫁的王爷,是传说中的暴君,杀人不眨眼,嗜血成狂的一个魔君的?圣旨一下,要千家的女儿嫁给东南国国的这个平南王爷,千家一听,仿佛是立马炸开了锅一样的,你不愿意去,我不愿意去,自然,就是由这个痴儿傻儿嫁过去了?
  • The Wood Beyond the World

    The Wood Beyond the World

    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。
  • 聊斋之狐仙系列

    聊斋之狐仙系列

    《聊斋志异》中共出现了三十余位狐女形象,这些狐女们有的娇憨可爱,有的聪敏过人,有的温婉贤淑,代表了蒲松龄对女性真善美的审美理想,可以这么说,《聊斋志异》的狐女形象代表着蒲松龄最高的美学追求。本文选取了三十个狐女故事,或嗔或痴,或笑或怒皆动人心弦!
  • 邪仙路

    邪仙路

    他是初入修真界的菜鸟,却偶然得到一篇掌握时空秘诀的《大衍时空》法诀,另类的修真秘法,神奇的隔空再造元婴手段。他是同门眼中钉、肉中刺,却又如何凭借神奇功法在道门中立足,建立属于自己的修真皇朝,一步步走向邪仙之路。修真境界划分:炼气期,金丹期,元婴期,化神期,返虚期,合道期,天谴期。
  • 疸门

    疸门

    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。
  • 一纸浮生梦江湖

    一纸浮生梦江湖

    一梦醒来,风起稻香,她从来不属于这里,也,属于这里,至于她是谁,对她来说,在不在意,也无妨了。
  • 弈战狂神

    弈战狂神

    “时间乱流,我也碰到了啊,这东西也会遗传吗?我老爸遇到了,没想到我也遇到了。”方睿涛惊讶的看着眼前的世界。方啸宇最小的儿子方睿涛气愤于中国近代的屈辱,带着自己的灵魂芯片风云十九号以及一个微型工厂,踏上了还未经过检测的时光机,结果却被时间乱流带到了一个玄幻的世界。谁说我准备的科学技术没有用,先让你们看看什么叫合金钢。谁说玄幻世界就不能有现代科技,先丢你几十颗手雷再说。战气我也会,属性还比你多,魔炼有什么难得,我一样可以,而且比你们更强。看我坐拥群美,争霸大陆,就连魔神我也一样挑落马下,因为这个世界本就应该是我的。
  • 腹黑嫡女自成狂

    腹黑嫡女自成狂

    被无良师傅送错地方,记忆还被封印。再度成为杀手,只为母亲报仇。弱者是没有资格说不的!变强,只为生存;落后了,就要被杀。一花一世界,一叶一追寻;一曲一场叹,一生为一人。爱上你,无法自拔;爱你一生,永不变心。【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 在那河对岸

    在那河对岸

    一个长相绝美的小男孩,为了生存,成为了河岸最美丽的舞姬之一。他用男人的身份,舞姬的眼睛,去看这偌大的长安城,寻找着自己的来历。他会是近十年来最美丽的舞姬,还是最危险的杀手?
  • 帝姬策

    帝姬策

    一朝穿越,她两世为人。一句得言昭者得天下,倾覆了她的一生。乱世沉浮,他执掌天下,拥有侵吞万里的野心。一举麾下,灭了她的国,毁了她的家,更残酷的是禁锢了她的身。她对他,除去国恨,就是家仇。他说:“从今往后,朕的六宫只为你而留。”他一国之帝为何如此执着,而她亡国公主又该如何反抗?