登陆注册
19924200000006

第6章

"Don't worry about our disappointment, dear. It isn't so very great. I dare say we'll be able to get along here in some way, until papa is rich again. You know they intend to make him share with them."

"It strikes me that he is sharing with them already," said Christie, glancing bitterly round the cabin; "sharing everything--ourselves, our lives, our tastes."

"Ye-e-s!" said Jessie, with vaguely hesitating assent. "Yes, even these:" she showed two dice in the palm of her little hand. "I found 'em in the drawer of our dressing-table."

"Throw them away," said Christie impatiently.

But Jessie's small fingers closed over the dice. "I'll give them to the little Kearney. I dare say they were the poor boy's playthings."

The appearance of these relics of wild dissipation, however, had lifted Christie out of her sublime resignation. "For Heaven's sake, Jessie," she said, "look around and see if there is anything more!"

To make sure, they each began to scrimmage; the broken-spirited Christie exhibiting both alacrity and penetration in searching obscure corners. In the dining-room, behind the dresser, three or four books were discovered: an odd volume of Thackeray, another of Dickens, a memorandum-book or diary. "This seems to be Latin," said Jessie, fishing out a smaller book. "I can't read it."

"It's just as well you shouldn't," said Christie shortly, whose ideas of a general classical impropriety had been gathered from pages of Lempriere's dictionary. "Put it back directly."

Jessie returned certain odes of one Horatius Flaccus to the corner, and uttered an exclamation. "Oh, Christie! here are some letters tied up with a ribbon."

They were two or three prettily written letters, exhaling a faint odor of refinement and of the pressed flowers that peeped from between the loose leaves. "I see, 'My darling Fairfax.' It's from some woman."

"I don't think much of her, whosoever she is," said Christie, tossing the intact packet back into the corner.

"Nor I," echoed Jessie.

Nevertheless, by some feminine inconsistency, evidently the circumstance did make them think more of HIM, for a minute later, when they had reentered their own room, Christie remarked, "The idea of petting a man by his family name! Think of mamma ever having called papa 'darling Carr'!"

"Oh, but his family name isn't Fairfax," said Jessie hastily;

"that's his FIRST name, his Christian name. I forget what's his other name, but nobody ever calls him by it."

"Do you mean," said Christie, with glistening eyes and awful deliberation--"do you mean to say that we're expected to fall in with this insufferable familiarity? I suppose they'll be calling US by our Christian names next."

"Oh, but they do!" said Jessie, mischievously.

"What!"

"They call me Miss Jessie; and Kearney, the little one, asked me if Christie played."

"And what did you say?"

"I said that you did," answered Jessie, with an affectation of cherubic simplicity. "You do, dear; don't you? . . . There, don't get angry, darling; I couldn't flare up all of a sudden in the face of that poor little creature; he looked so absurd--and so--so honest."

Christie turned away, relapsing into her old resigned manner, and assuming her household duties in a quiet, temporizing way that was, however, without hope or expectation.

Mr. Carr, who had dined with his friends under the excuse of not adding to the awkwardness of the first day's housekeeping returned late at night with a mass of papers and drawings, into which he afterwards withdrew, but not until he had delivered himself of a mysterious package entrusted to him by the young men for his daughters. It contained a contribution to their board in the shape of a silver spoon and battered silver mug, which Jessie chose to facetiously consider as an affecting reminiscence of the youthful Kearney's christening days--which it probably was.

The young girls retired early to their white snow-drifts: Jessie not without some hilarious struggles with hers, in which she was, however, quickly surprised by the deep and refreshing sleep of youth; Christie to lie awake and listen to the night wind, that had changed from the first cool whispers of sunset to the sturdy breath of the mountain. At times the frail house shook and trembled.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 掌门人

    掌门人

    门线前的最后一道防线,是铁墙还是薄纸……本能的瞬间反应,让一切没有速度角度的射门都变得温柔……摘下所有射门是他的目标,虽然这不可能,但是只要努力过,只要做的最好,那就是成功……PS:这个猪脚的名字是有些雷人,但是这应该还不至于过不了这个坎吧!
  • 网游之战斗在美女工作室

    网游之战斗在美女工作室

    从未玩过网络游戏的易天,在找工作的时候,突然阴差阳错的进入了一家全是由美女组成的工作室……
  • 清缘佳史

    清缘佳史

    康熙皇帝出巡时,巧遇活泼开朗、武功高强的女子婉盈,于是两人情投意合,结下情缘,两个有缘之人相遇相知而不能相爱的事例自古至今层出不穷。爱情为何总要经过重重考验?海枯石烂,岁月无痕,都在相连的心绪中悄然停滞,只望能将无数的情丝化为红线,缠绕在三生石上,留住永恒不变的誓言……
  • 文苑奇葩:历史文人那些事儿

    文苑奇葩:历史文人那些事儿

    顽主是一种文化,在世俗人眼里,他们是不务正业的形象代言人,不过他们却未必不学无术。历朝历代,顽主可谓层出不穷,上至帝王将相,下至平民百姓 ,均有佼佼者脱颖而出,甚而至于在某一门类大放异彩,成为大师级人物。只是很多时候,顽主们的所作所为对社会大环境所不相容,与身份地位大相径庭而惹人非议。 但是,换一个角度来思考,我们又有什么理由指责上天在没有选择的情况下赋予他们的过失呢?我们更应该清醒地看到他们在某一个领域做出的贡献,或者成绩。
  • 用美国小学课本学英语

    用美国小学课本学英语

    本书精选北美中小学课本中的标准课文,涵盖的学科广泛,包括数学、语文、科学、艺术、生物、化学、体育等等。藉此你可以从中体验到美式教育的精髓。我们试图让你真正“浸入”到纯正的英语环境中,实现有意识记与无意识记的完美结合,充分调动自己无意识记忆的潜在能力,让英语学习不再是一件辛苦的事情。
  • 园门随笔

    园门随笔

    一部生活型随笔,记录日常生活中心情、感悟、新观点、新发现……
  • A Dissertation on the Poor Laws

    A Dissertation on the Poor Laws

    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。
  • 老婆别下手

    老婆别下手

    天天做梦,像连续剧一样,梦见着同一个男人。她恐惧着,大汗淋漓地醒来,发现,一切不过是梦一场。伴随着这场荒诞的梦,她遭遇到一系列的变故,被未婚夫抛弃,房子被卖,父亲另娶,她几乎就要走投无路了,居然还有一个莫名其妙的小女孩拉着她的衣服不撒手,叫她妈咪!!全世界都灰暗了,梦里的那个男人,却真的走到了她的身边……是梦,是真?女孩说:妈咪,请不要再犹豫了!就让我帮你吧!我们一起把这个帅哥医生拐回家!!
  • 洪荒风云

    洪荒风云

    少年的到机遇改变他的人生,会展开怎样传奇经历呢?且看他如何从一个默默无名小卒一步一步走向巅峰‘最终主宰三界逆袭成圣,享受无尽长生,
  • 重生之绝不放手

    重生之绝不放手

    她是农民出身,辛苦奋斗二十载,一朝得幸进入越氏集团成为总裁助理,无奈一切皆是设计好的一场戏,失了心,动了情,满身鲜血的三分之一要送与总裁的救命恩人,一时不察,命丧黄泉。他是受上天眷顾的人,有钱有权又有貌,十年前一个女人‘奋不顾身’救了他的命,深受重毒,他只是想报恩,却让心爱的女人黯然离世心死成殇。(本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。)