登陆注册
15460200000124

第124章 CHAPTER XXVII(1)

THORPE found the Duke of Glastonbury a much more interesting person to watch and to talk with, both during the dinner Saturday evening and later, than he had anticipated.

He was young, and slight of frame, and not at all imposing in stature, but he bore himself with a certain shy courtliness of carriage which had a distinction of its own. His face, with its little black moustache and large dark eyes, was fine upon examination, but in some elusively foreign way.

There lingered a foreign note, too, in the way he talked.

His speech was English enough to the ear, it was true, but it was the considered English of a book, and its phrases had a deftness which was hardly native. He looked, if not a sad young man, then one conscious always of sufficient reasons for sadness, but one came, after a time, to see that the mood beneath was not melancholy. It had even its sprightly side, which shone out irregularly in his glance and talk, from a sober mean of amiable weariness.

Thorpe knew his extraordinary story--that of a poor tutor, earning his living in ignorance of the fact that he had a birthright of any sort, who had been miraculously translated into the heir, not only to an ancient title but to vast collateral wealth. He had been born and reared in France, and it was there that the heralds of this stupendous change in his affairs had found him out. There was a good deal more to the story, including numerous unsavoury legends about people now many years dead, and it was impossible to observe the young Duke and not seem to perceive signs that he was still nervously conscious of these legends.

The story of his wife--a serene, grey-eyed, rather silent young person, with a pale face of some beauty, and with much purity and intellect--was strange enough to match. She also had earned her own living, as a private secretary or type-writing girl, or something of the sort, and her husband had deliberately chosen her after he had come into his title. One might study her very closely, however, and catch no hint that these facts in any degree disconcerted her.

Thorpe studied her a good deal, in a furtive way, with a curiosity born of his knowledge that the Duke had preferred her, when he might have married his widowed cousin, who was now Thorpe's own wife. How he had come to know this, he could never have told. He had breathed it in, somehow, with the gossip-laden atmosphere of that one London season of his. It was patent enough, too, that his wife--his Edith--had not only liked this ducal youngster very much, but still entertained toward him a considerable affection.

She had never dissembled this feeling, and it visibly informed her glance and manner now, at her own table, when she turned to speak with him, where he sat at her right hand. Thorpe had never dreamed of thinking ill of his wife's friendship, even when her indifference to what he thought had been most taken for granted.

Now that this was all changed, and the amazing new glory of a lover had enveloped him, he had a distinct delight in watching the myriad charming phases of her kind manner, half-sisterly, half-motherly, toward the grave-faced young man. It was all a part of the delicious change which these past few days had wrought in her, this warm and supple softness of mien, of eye and smile and voice.

But how the Duke, if really he had had a chance to marry Edith, could have taken the type-writer instead, baffled speculation.

Thorpe gave more attention to this problem, during dinner, than he did to the conversation of the table.

His exchange of sporadic remarks with the young Duchess beside him was indeed an openly perfunctory affair, which left him abundant leisure to contemplate her profile in silence, while she turned to listen to the general talk, of which Miss Madden and the Hon. Winifred Plowden bore the chief burden. The talk of these ladies interested him but indifferently, though the frequent laughter suggested that it was amusing. He looked from his wife to the Duchess and back again, in ever-recurring surprise that the coronet had been carried past Edith.

And once he looked a long time at his wife and the Duke, and formulated the theory that she must have refused him.

No doubt that was why she bad been sympathetically fond of him ever since, and was being so nice to him now.

Yes--clearly that was it. He felt upon this that he also liked the Duke very much.

It was by no means so apparent that the Duke liked him.

Both he and his Duchess, indeed, were scrupulously and even deferentially polite, but there was a painstaking effect about it, which, seemingly, they lacked the art altogether to conceal. It seemed to Thorpe that the other guests unconsciously took their cue from this august couple, and all exposed somewhat the effort their civility to him involved. At another time the suspicion of this would have stung him. He had only to glance across the table to where his wife sat now, and it was all right.

What other people thought of him--how other people liked or disliked him--was of no earthly importance.

Whenever he chose to exert himself, he could compel from them the behaviour that he desired. It was their dull inability to read character which prompted them to regard him as merely a rich outsider who had married Edith Cressage.

He viewed with a comfortable tolerance this infirmity of theirs. When the time came, if he wanted to do so, he could awaken them to their delusion as by forked lightning and the burst of thunder.

The whim came to him, and expanded swiftly into a determination, to contrive some intimate talk forthwith with the Duke.

The young man seemed both clever and sensible, and in a way impressionable as well. Thorpe thought that he would probably have some interesting things to say, but still more he thought of him as a likely listener.

It would be the easier to detach him from the company, since the occasion was one of studied informality.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 上古世纪:血与火的乐章

    上古世纪:血与火的乐章

    恶魔伴随着黑夜而来,血雨降落在大地,英雄与诸神的爱恨情愁,交织在浓稠的血浆与森然的白骨之中,瘟疫和战火吞噬了人民。任何灾难的时代,人们都需要一个英雄,来带领他们走向光明,此刻起,你就是一个英雄,你将成为人民的信仰,将黑暗永远驱逐!
  • 石井边

    石井边

    有一个口非常古老的石井。晚上的时候总是会发出非常恐怖的声音。人们不知道,是先有了院子,还是先有了石井。这个秘密只有这荒凉的老院子和这古老的石井才知道有一天,一个人到了这个石井边。。。。。。
  • 冷王借权护萌妃

    冷王借权护萌妃

    上课玩手机看小说,禁不住睡得诱惑,华丽一睡不醒.特么这跟睡美人碰了纺锤有毛区别?至少睡美人有王子的吻.她特么有蛇吻,这区别太大咱抗议!抗议无效,美少女咱认命奔.救了棺材男,拽的谁欠他二百五.不谢就算了,提起小身板踢河里棺材男你甚意!
  • 一零零八

    一零零八

    本该活着却死了的哥哥;不该存在却一直在活的妹妹。每天都在和自己做斗争的人,想要不被夺走时间和身体,就一定要过的不幸,才行...
  • 误惹总裁:吃定呆萌小娇妻

    误惹总裁:吃定呆萌小娇妻

    他是华夏彩钻级别的王老五,传说既有洁癖又冷酷无情;她是父母双亡寄人篱下的孤女,首富竟然成了她的监护人;怕打雷的她抱着枕头找他,他既无辜又委屈,“你说了你不喜欢我的!”她无限娇柔,“我害怕打雷。”某日她拿着一MP3,怒气冲冲的窜到他面前,质问,“这些是什么?”他旁边一小包子淡定的说,“妈妈真笨,那里面是吓你的雷声啊……”然后小包子跳下沙发,把MP3和音响相连,不仅有轰隆隆的雷声,还有她说过的一些赖不掉的承诺……
  • 帝主星空

    帝主星空

    三星聚首,慌乱的世界掀起波澜正魔的对抗,是非恩怨的评判偏远之城的少年,带着满腔仇恨与怒火,在命运的驱使下,踏上了天道战场。
  • 我的笨蛋妻

    我的笨蛋妻

    我的名字叫叶紫嫣,和全班同学去春游,谁知,我们一起穿越了!穿越到了原古战争时期。还不是我们所学的历史简直就是一个架空时期。在那里有魂兽,有人兽合体。自己还不知道怎么的就把自己给卖了。命苦啊!
  • 至黑之路

    至黑之路

    至黑之夜,邪神降世!苍茫大陆,万千修士拔剑而起,亦有真仙横空出世!悠悠千年,一个跨界而来的灵魂在这个混乱的世界上醒来。
  • 王俊凯穿越千年遇见你

    王俊凯穿越千年遇见你

    沛沛第一次写穿越小说,有什么不好的地方请见谅哈(?>?<?)不是男主穿越而是女主穿越了。王俊凯现代当红组合tfboys的队长而在古代确是一位高冷王爷,从来没有人见过他笑,他娶了一位千金,因为她的骄横无比他讨厌她从来没有碰过她,一次意外她失足落水另一个灵魂进入了她的身体,从此以后她就变了一个人王爷从此改变了对她的看法。
  • 风抚茶飘香

    风抚茶飘香

    本是送茶之人,却意外身亡,一朝穿越,竟穿越到茶世家族毁容二小姐身上,被欺负的一点一点,她都会加倍还回来,奇迹的是,她的脸竟变了............