登陆注册
15476100000101

第101章 CHAPTER XXV(5)

"I believe in my luck," said Willoughby.

Clara was now sought for. The lord of the house desired her presence impatiently, and had to wait. She was in none of the lower rooms. Barclay, her maid, upon interrogation, declared she was in none of the upper. Willoughby turned sharp on De Craye: he was there.

The ladies Eleanor and Isabel and Miss Dale were consulted. They had nothing to say about Clara's movements, more than that they could not understand her exceeding restlessness. The idea of her being out of doors grew serious; heaven was black, hard thunder rolled, and lightning flushed the battering rain. Men bearing umbrellas, shawls, and cloaks were dispatched on a circuit of the park. De Craye said: "I'll be one."

"No," cried Willoughby, starting to interrupt him, "I can't allow it."

"I've the scent of a hound, Willoughby; I'll soon be on the track."

"My dear Horace, I won't let you go."

"Adieu, dear boy! and if the lady's discoverable, I'm the one to find her."

He stepped to the umbrella-stand. There was then a general question whether Clara had taken her umbrella. Barclay said she had. The fact indicated a wider stroll than round inside the park:

Crossjay was likewise absent. De Craye nodded to himself.

Willoughby struck a rattling blow on the barometer.

"Where's Pollington?" he called, and sent word for his man Pollington to bring big fishing-boots and waterproof wrappers.

An urgent debate within him was in progress.

Should he go forth alone on his chance of discovering Clara and forgiving her under his umbrella and cloak? or should he prevent De Craye from going forth alone on the chance he vaunted so impudently?

"You will offend me, Horace, if you insist," he said.

"Regard me as an instrument of destiny, Willoughby," replied De Craye.

"Then we go in company."

"But that's an addition of one that cancels the other by conjunction, and's worse than simple division: for I can't trust my wits unless I rely on them alone, you see."

"Upon my word, you talk at times most unintelligible stuff, to be frank with you, Horace. Give it in English."

"'Tis not suited, perhaps, to the genius of the language, for I thought I talked English."

"Oh, there's English gibberish as well as Irish, we know!"

"And a deal foolisher when they do go at it; for it won't bear squeezing, we think, like Irish."

"Where!" exclaimed the ladies, "where can she be! The storm is terrible."

Laetitia suggested the boathouse.

"For Crossjay hadn't a swim this morning!" said De Craye.

No one reflected on the absurdity that Clara should think of taking Crossjay for a swim in the lake, and immediately after his breakfast: it was accepted as a suggestion at least that she and Crossjay had gone to the lake for a row.

In the hopefulness of the idea, Willoughby suffered De Craye to go on his chance unaccompanied. He was near chuckling. He projected a plan for dismissing Crossjay and remaining in the boathouse with Clara, luxuriating in the prestige which would attach to him for seeking and finding her. Deadly sentiments intervened. Still he might expect to be alone with her where she could not slip from him.

The throwing open of the hall-doors for the gentlemen presented a framed picture of a deluge. All the young-leaved trees were steely black, without a gradation of green, drooping and pouring, and the song of rain had become an inveterate hiss.

The ladies beholding it exclaimed against Clara, even apostrophized her, so dark are trivial errors when circumstances frown. She must be mad to tempt such weather: she was very giddy; she was never at rest. Clara! Clara! how could you be so wild!

Ought we not to tell Dr. Middleton?

Laetitia induced them to spare him.

"Which way do you take?" said Willoughby, rather fearful that his companion was not to be got rid of now.

"Any way," said De Craye. "I chuck up my head like a halfpenny, and go by the toss."

This enraging nonsense drove off Willoughby. De Craye saw him cast a furtive eye at his heels to make sure he was not followed, and thought, "Jove! he may be fond of her. But he's not on the track. She's a determined girl, if I'm correct. She's a girl of a hundred thousand. Girls like that make the right sort of wives for the right men. They're the girls to make men think of marrying.

To-morrow! only give me a chance. They stick to you fast when they do stick."

Then a thought of her flower-like drapery and face caused him fervently to hope she had escaped the storm.

Calling at the West park-lodge he heard that Miss Middleton had been seen passing through the gate with Master Crossjay; but she had not been seen coming back. Mr. Vernon Whitford had passed through half an hour later.

"After his young man!" said the colonel.

The lodge-keeper's wife and daughter knew of Master Crossjay's pranks; Mr. Whitford, they said, had made inquiries about him and must have caught him and sent him home to change his dripping things; for Master Crossjay had come back, and had declined shelter in the lodge; he seemed to be crying; he went away soaking over the wet grass, hanging his head. The opinion at the lodge was that Master Crossjay was unhappy.

"He very properly received a wigging from Mr. Whitford, I have no doubt," said Colonel Do Craye.

Mother and daughter supposed it to be the case, and considered Crossjay very wilful for not going straight home to the Hall to change his wet clothes; he was drenched.

Do Craye drew out his watch. The time was ten minutes past eleven.

If the surmise he had distantly spied was correct, Miss Middleton would have been caught in the storm midway to her destination. By his guess at her character (knowledge of it, he would have said), he judged that no storm would daunt her on a predetermined expedition. He deduced in consequence that she was at the present moment flying to her friend, the charming brunette Lucy Darleton.

Still, as there was a possibility of the rain having been too much for her, and as he had no other speculation concerning the route she had taken, he decided upon keeping along the road to Rendon, with a keen eye at cottage and farmhouse windows.

同类推荐
  • WILD FLOWERS

    WILD FLOWERS

    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。
  • 随园诗话

    随园诗话

    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。
  • Dona Perecta

    Dona Perecta

    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。
  • 梨树县乡土志

    梨树县乡土志

    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。
  • The Hunting of the Snark

    The Hunting of the Snark

    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。
热门推荐
  • 淳真初恋

    淳真初恋

    世界这么大,我们还是相遇。一见钟情,心动与她的出现。我爱你,我的初恋!
  • 隐婚密爱:男神哥哥在身边

    隐婚密爱:男神哥哥在身边

    卖chong气娃娃,撩自己的哥哥,没有什么是钱多多不会做的了。她正得意洋洋的时候,某男一把把她拽到床上。“技术还不过关,仍需多练练。”以下,省略一百万字。问,“钱多多,你哥真帅,能介绍给我认识吗?”答,“行,他那方便需求太旺盛,我已经受不了了,给你吧。”友人懵。说好的亲哥哥呢,他们这是在乱……啥吗?……温馨提示::全书无节操无底线,撒起狗粮来,完全不记成本。不入此坑,遗憾万年
  • 火澜

    火澜

    当一个现代杀手之王穿越到这个世界。是隐匿,还是崛起。一场血雨腥风的传奇被她改写。一条无上的强者之路被她踏破。修斗气,炼元丹,收兽宠,化神器,大闹皇宫,炸毁学院,打死院长,秒杀狗男女,震惊大陆。无止尽的契约能力,上古神兽,千年魔兽,纷纷前来抱大腿,惊傻世人。她说:在我眼里没有好坏之分,只有强弱之分,只要你能打败我,这世间所有都是你的,打不败我,就从这世间永远消失。她狂,她傲,她的目标只有一个,就是凌驾这世间一切之上。三国皇帝,魔界妖王,冥界之主,仙界至尊。到底谁才是陪着她走到最后的那个?他说:上天入地,我会陪着你,你活着,有我,你死,也一定有我。本文一对一,男强女强,强强联手,不喜勿入。
  • 梦里的岁月长河

    梦里的岁月长河

    一个个小的故事,一朵朵历史长河里的浪花,比较仿佛故事会或者某些“学者”的所谓品历史,喜欢看的可以看一看
  • 半世尘埃——悟空回忆录

    半世尘埃——悟空回忆录

    孙悟空的最后五百年的时光里,走在大明王朝的土地上,遇见了吴承恩,跟他说起了西游往事。吴承恩大受启发,写下了《西游记》传之后世。在2013年,孙悟空出现在播放着《西游降魔篇》的某影院。他最喜欢看的就是周星驰的大话西游。他曾经也是一个山贼,也为爱情而困扰,也是一个食人的妖怪。
  • 民间喜剧

    民间喜剧

    本作是由很多的喜剧小故事组成的,这些故事都来自于民间,将很多真实的事件或民间传说进行搞笑改编而成,故事的舞台主要设置在古代和现代的都市,主角都是普通人,愿读者们看得开心。
  • 浮生万象

    浮生万象

    从梦中穿越而来的少年,背负谜一样的家族悬案。上古天帝争锋,末世轮回再启,谁为刀俎,谁为鱼肉?梦中惊起凭栏坐,一念沧海皆成空。什么才是真正的不朽。----新书发布,求推荐票求收藏!!------书友群:550551560,有兴趣的童鞋可以进来玩~~
  • 岁月终章

    岁月终章

    天地悠悠,不过梦一场;人生一世,不过几轮回井底之蛙不知井外有天,天下之人不知天外有天,天外之人不知天是否为天,真真假假,天还是天真假也罢,虚实也罢,一路走来,物是人非
  • 那一刻,我听到花开的声音

    那一刻,我听到花开的声音

    《那一刻我听到花开的声音/成长智慧系列》文章以心灵启迪和励志为主,是作者与读者心与心的交流与沟通,是一次爱和哲理的青春洗礼,给你以启迪和智慧,其中多篇被《读者》、《青年文摘》、《格言》和《青年博览》转载。全书共分为五部分,精选了一些温馨哲理散文,通过描述生活中的小故事讲述生活中的爱与美好。由暨南大学出版社出版。
  • 我的人生奇异事件录

    我的人生奇异事件录

    碟仙,碟仙,忘川河水夺人魄,奈何桥头莫回首,若对人间有思念,速速前来我身边。。。这个世界,其实有很多科学难以解释的事情。你不知道,不代表它不存在。你玩过碟仙吗?接近过死亡吗?若是想知道玩碟仙的后果,就和我一起看看这个故事吧。