登陆注册
15462800000034

第34章 II(1)

It was three or four days before he became firmly adjusted to his new quarters. During this time he had met Cherry casually on the staircase, in going or coming, and received her shy greetings; but she had not repeated her visit, nor again alluded to it. He had spent part of a formal evening in the parlor in company with a calling deacon, who, unappalled by the Indian shawl for which the widow had exchanged her household cerements on such occasions, appeared to Herbert to have remote matrimonial designs, as far at least as a sympathetic deprecation of the vanities of the present, an echoing of her sighs like a modest encore, a preternatural gentility of manner, a vague allusion to the necessity of bearing "one another's burdens," and an everlasting promise in store, would seem to imply. To Herbert's vivid imagination, a discussion on the doctrinal points of last Sabbath's sermon was fraught with delicate suggestion and an acceptance by the widow of an appointment to attend the Wednesday evening "Lectures" had all the shy reluctant yielding of a granted rendezvous. Oddly enough, the more formal attitude seemed to be reserved for the young people, who, in the suggestive atmosphere of this spiritual flirtation, alone appeared to preserve the proprieties and, to some extent, decorously chaperon their elders. Herbert gravely turned the leaves of Cherry's music while she played and sang one or two discreet but depressing songs expressive of her unalterable but proper devotion to her mother's clock, her father's arm-chair, and her aunt's Bible; and Herbert joined somewhat boyishly in the soul-subduing refrain. Only once he ventured to suggest in a whisper that he would like to add HER music-stool to the adorable inventory; but he was met by such a disturbed and terrified look that he desisted.

"Another night of this wild and reckless dissipation will finish me," he said lugubriously to himself when he reached the solitude of his room. "I wonder how many times a week I'd have to help the girl play the spiritual gooseberry downstairs before we could have any fun ourselves?"Here the sound of distant laughter, interspersed with vivacious feminine shrieks, came through the open window. He glanced between the curtains. His neighbor's house was brilliantly lit, and the shadows of a few romping figures were chasing each other across the muslin shades of the windows. The objectionable young women were evidently enjoying themselves. In some conditions of the mind there is a certain exasperation in the spectacle of unmeaning enjoyment, and he shut the window sharply. At the same moment some one knocked at his door.

It was Miss Brooks, who had just come upstairs.

"Will you please let me have my music-stool?"He stared at her a moment in surprise, then recovering himself, said, "Yes, certainly," and brought the stool. For an instant he was tempted to ask why she wanted it, but his pride forbade him.

"Thank you. Good-night."

"Good-night!"

"I hope it wasn't in your way?"

"Not at all."

"Good-night!"

"Good-night."

She vanished. Herbert was perplexed. Between young ladies whose naive exuberance impelled them to throw handkerchiefs at his window and young ladies whose equally naive modesty demanded the withdrawal from his bedroom of a chair on which they had once sat, his lot seemed to have fallen in a troubled locality. Yet a day or two later he heard Cherry practising on the harmonium as he was ascending the stairs on his return from business; she had departed before he entered the room, but had left the music-stool behind her. It was not again removed.

One Sunday, the second or third of his tenancy, when Cherry and her mother were at church, and he had finished some work that he had brought from the bank, his former restlessness and sense of strangeness returned. The regular afternoon fog had thickened early, and, driving him back from a cheerless, chilly ramble on the hill, had left him still more depressed and solitary. In sheer desperation he moved some of the furniture, and changed the disposition of several smaller ornaments. Growing bolder, he even attacked the sacred shelf devoted to Tappington's serious literature and moral studies. At first glance the book of sermons looked suspiciously fresh and new for a volume of habitual reference, but its leaves were carefully cut, and contained one or two book-marks. It was only another evidence of that perfect youth's care and neatness. As he was replacing it he noticed a small object folded in white paper at the back of the shelf. To put the book back into its former position it was necessary to take this out. He did so, but its contents slid from his fingers and the paper to the floor. To his utter consternation, looking down he saw a pack of playing-cards strewn at his feet!

He hurriedly picked them up. They were worn and slippery from use, and exhaled a faint odor of tobacco. Had they been left there by some temporary visitor unknown to Tappington and his family, or had they been hastily hidden by a servant? Yet they were of a make and texture superior to those that a servant would possess; looking at them carefully, he recognized them to be of a quality used by the better-class gamblers. Restoring them carefully to their former position, he was tempted to take out the other volumes, and was rewarded with the further discovery of a small box of ivory counters, known as "poker-chips." It was really very extraordinary! It was quite the cache of some habitual gambler.

Herbert smiled grimly at the irreverent incongruity of the hiding-place selected by its unknown and mysterious owner, and amused himself by fancying the horror of his sainted predecessor had he made the discovery. He determined to replace them, and to put some mark upon the volumes before them in order to detect any future disturbance of them in his absence.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 心颤

    心颤

    那个男人让她害怕。一年前,灰姑娘成韵高调嫁入豪门。一年后,成韵默默被豪门扫地出门。豪门对外宣称,因为成韵不自爱。听了这话成韵冷笑:我呸!呼风唤雨的孟青和从来没有想过,有一天会和死敌的前妻有所牵扯。他明明不是爱吃窝边草的那种人啊!
  • 虚妄年华

    虚妄年华

    关于一个平凡的高中生的凌乱生活、只不过是年少轻狂、经历种种悲欢离合阴晴圆缺最终却发现一切都只不过是虚妄之中虚度的年华。
  • 传说神印

    传说神印

    江湖中人穿越变废柴,奇遇之下得功法,得天魄,拥有盘古武灵做靠山,还有神龙做小弟。谁与争锋。
  • 八卦小女人联盟

    八卦小女人联盟

    写写自己,写着写着就成了故事。聊聊八卦,聊着聊着就成了笑话。
  • 亿万通缉令:老婆,回来吧

    亿万通缉令:老婆,回来吧

    一场选美比赛,陷入他的囹圄,进退不得。“你给我三十万,我就是你的。”为了爷爷,她孤注一掷。“好!”他点头,霸道宣布,“第一,做我的女人,不许和其他异性有来往。”“第二,记住你是我的女人这个事实,直到我厌烦你为止。”***一场背叛,她忍痛打掉八个月大的孩子,远走他乡。多年后相遇,他们形同陌路,却终是躲不过宿命的安排……
  • 魂道源

    魂道源

    天地有魂,宇魂降世。千千世界,众生争道。看郑宇步步抗争,与命运抗争。得道易成道难,不管前路如何,只为心中所愿
  • 可以重相逢

    可以重相逢

    假如错过了,可能就真的远离了,致略显遗憾的人生吧!
  • 守天人

    守天人

    天地无极,生万物之灵;一声鸣啼,渡人间千劫。天地何来,天地何去?路漫漫其修远,上下求索。吾愿入俗尘,经苦海沧桑;吾愿出九霄,赴飘渺蛮荒。只求能窥得这天地之道,守这四合八荒,乾坤不灭,苍生不息。
  • 中国人,你缺了什么

    中国人,你缺了什么

    本书收录梁晓声先生1993到2013年二十年间思想随笔43篇,追问中国,思考社会,贯穿始终的是作者的平民立场和人文情怀。其中《当交管撞上人文》等新作是首次结集出版。梁晓声的思想随笔质朴,淡泊,犀利,是2013年一部有分量的作品。
  • 星甲狂潮

    星甲狂潮

    银河历元年,人类依靠自身的力量终于走出太阳系,迈向银河时代……在这个巨大的时代背景之下,人类进化的方向不再单纯的局限于开发自身的强大,也不是一味的追求外力的帮助;一种崭新的途径展现在人们的面前,单兵武装与异能力量的结合,科技与生命的交融,星甲由此诞生。激烈又热血的战斗,友情与爱情的交织,梦想与奇迹的诞生,尽在星甲狂潮。