登陆注册
15476100000134

第134章 CHAPTER XXXIV(2)

"I owe him my eternal gratitude for his behaviour last night. She was one of my bright faces. Her laughter was delicious; rain in the desert! It will tell you what the load on me was, when I assure you those two were merely a spectacle to me--points I scored in a lost game. And I know they were witty."

"They both have wit; a kind of wit," Willoughby assented.

"They struck together like a pair of cymbals."

"Not the highest description of instrument. However, they amuse me. I like to hear them when I am in the vein."

"That vein should be more at command with you, my friend. You can be perfect, if you like."

"Under your tuition."

Willoughby leaned to her, bowing languidly. He was easier in his pain for having hoodwinked the lady. She was the outer world to him; she could tune the world's voice; prescribe which of the two was to be pitied, himself or Clara; and he did not intend it to be himself, if it came to the worst. They were far away from that at present, and he continued:

"Probably a man's power of putting on a face is not equal to a girl's. I detest petty dissensions. Probably I show it when all is not quite smooth. Little fits of suspicion vex me. It is a weakness, not to play them off, I know. Men have to learn the arts which come to women by nature. I don't sympathize with suspicion, from having none myself,"

His eyebrows shot up. That ill-omened man Flitch had sidled round by the bushes to within a few feet of him. Flitch primarily defended himself against the accusation of drunkenness, which was hurled at him to account for his audacity in trespassing against the interdict; but he admitted that he had taken "something short" for a fortification in visiting scenes where he had once been happy--at Christmastide, when all the servants, and the butler at head, grey old Mr. Chessington, sat in rows, toasting the young heir of the old Hall in the old port wine! Happy had he been then, before ambition for a shop, to be his own master and an independent gentleman, had led him into his quagmire:--to look back envying a dog on the old estate, and sigh for the smell of Patterne stables: sweeter than Arabia, his drooping nose appeared to say.

He held up close against it something that imposed silence on Sir Willoughby as effectively as a cunning exordium in oratory will enchain mobs to swallow what is not complimenting them; and this he displayed secure in its being his licence to drivel his abominable pathos. Sir Willoughby recognized Clara's purse. He understood at once how the must have come by it: he was not so quick in devising a means of stopping the tale. Flitch foiled him.

"Intact," he replied to the question: "What have you there?" He repeated this grand word. And then he turned to Mrs. Mountstuart to speak of Paradise and Adam, in whom he saw the prototype of himself: also the Hebrew people in the bondage of Egypt, discoursed of by the clergymen, not without a likeness to him.

"Sorrows have done me one good, to send me attentive to church, my lady," said Flitch, "when I might have gone to London, the coachman's home, and been driving some honourable family, with no great advantage to my morals, according to what I hear of. And a purse found under the seat of a fly in London would have a poor chance of returning intact to the young lady losing it."

"Put it down on that chair; inquiries will be made, and you will see Sir Willoughby," said Mrs. Mountstuart. "Intact, no doubt; it is not disputed."

With one motion of a finger she set the man rounding.

Flitch halted; he was very regretful of the termination of his feast of pathos, and he wished to relate the finding of the purse, but he could not encounter Mrs. Mountstuart's look; he slouched away in very close resemblance to the ejected Adam of illustrated books.

"It's my belief that naturalness among the common people has died out of the kingdom," she said.

Willoughby charitably apologized for him. "He has been fuddling himself."

Her vigilant considerateness had dealt the sensitive gentleman a shock, plainly telling him she had her ideas of his actual posture. Nor was he unhurt by her superior acuteness and her display of authority on his grounds.

He said, boldly, as he weighed the purse, half tossing it: "It's not unlike Clara's."

He feared that his lips and cheeks were twitching, and as he grew aware of a glassiness of aspect that would reflect any suspicion of a keen-eyed woman, he became bolder still!

"Laetitia's, I know it is not. Hers is an ancient purse."

"A present from you!"

"How do you hit on that, my dear lady?"

"Deductively."

"Well, the purse looks as good as new in quality, like the owner.

"The poor dear has not much occasion for using it."

"You are mistaken: she uses it daily."

"If it were better filled, Sir Willoughby, your old scheme might be arranged. The parties do not appear so unwilling. Professor Crooklyn and I came on them just now rather by surprise, and I assure you their heads were close, faces meeting, eyes musing."

"Impossible."

"Because when they approach the point, you won't allow it!

Selfish!"

"Now," said Willoughby, very animatedly, "question Clara. Now, do, my dear Mrs. Mountstuart, do speak to Clara on that head; she will convince you I have striven quite recently against myself, if you like. I have instructed her to aid me, given her the fullest instructions, carte blanche. She cannot possibly have a doubt. I may look to her to remove any you may entertain from your mind on the subject. I have proposed, seconded, and chorussed it, and it will not be arranged. If you expect me to deplore that fact, I can only answer that my actions are under my control, my feelings are not. I will do everything consistent with the duties of a man of honour perpetually running into fatal errors because he did not properly consult the dictates of those feelings at the right season. I can violate them: but I can no more command them than I can my destiny. They were crushed of old, and so let them be now.

同类推荐
  • 龙舒增广净土文

    龙舒增广净土文

    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。
  • 诗义固说

    诗义固说

    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。
  • 大乘密嚴經

    大乘密嚴經

    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。
  • 春秋列国志传

    春秋列国志传

    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。
  • 烟屿楼笔记

    烟屿楼笔记

    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
  • 恋上正太小王子

    恋上正太小王子

    一次争吵,相爱的他们面临分手的危机。一场车祸,他不幸失忆。原本是最爱的男友,如今却只能认作弟弟,面对昔日爱人,她是继续以姐姐身份编织善意的谎言,还是唤醒他失落的记忆?
  • 军营童话

    军营童话

    和平时期创作军事题材类小说,对没有经历过战争洗礼的军旅作家来说具有挑战性。如何另辟蹊径,既紧扣时代主题,又体现军营特色,是创作军事题材类小说需要共同面对的问题。作者从女军人特有的视角,避开英雄、远离圣贤,以平静而细腻的笔调描绘出了主人公对亲人的孝、对朋友的诚和对事业的忠,突显了新世纪新阶段军人的价值取向、伦理道德和对人生的思考……《军营童话》没有提出国家和民族生死存亡的大是大非问题,但透过“平淡”的军营生活能使人们感受到打赢未来战争的坚强信心;她没有耗费过多笔墨描述精彩刺激的战争场面,但紧贴新时期军队历史使命勾勒出了热火朝天的军营气象;她没有煊染更多生离死别的感人场面,但细腻的亲情、友情和爱情同样能拨人心弦。
  • 正气一刀

    正气一刀

    万年前,修罗魔君欲献祭全人类,为其成就武神之位,凌天正联合五州八派灭其肉身,打入轮回。凌天正身死道消,留一缕灵魂于混沌珠。李不凡与女友王小丫被传送到异大陆,李不凡得到混沌珠,王小丫被左修罗轮回觉醒,各自成长为绝世强者。一个代表正义,一个代表邪恶,当宿命之战开始时,李不凡发现敌人竟是其苦苦找寻的女友,试看发誓欲拯救万界生灵的李不凡,又如何来拯救自己的女友?
  • 匪娘有毒,抢个堡主当老公

    匪娘有毒,抢个堡主当老公

    别人穿越都是吃香的喝辣的,凭什么她林瑾然穿越就是生孩子?!别动,痛死老娘了,破孩子还不给我出来!恩,这孩子还挺萌,像个包子,什么宋家堡主?那是谁不认识,乖儿子别乱认老爹,给你娘我找麻烦。等等,为毛这么像?娃啊,他不会真是你亲爹吧?某女人一脸错愕的看着似笑非笑的某男人,额头挂满黑线,林子涵默默的捏了一把汗,他娘就是彪悍如牛。【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 农家悍妻:相公,有病得治

    农家悍妻:相公,有病得治

    她是一个最普通的穿越女,他是一个落榜的穷书生。原本宋幺妹以为,两个人的结合是她那嗜钱如命的奶奶和刁钻泼辣的大伯母的手笔。挣钱打脸过好日子才是王道。可后来才知道,原来一切的一切不过是各种阴谋与手段,而她只是他复仇的一颗棋子。只是当她知道一切,怨他,恨她,怒他,发誓一辈子都不要理他的时候,才发现原来他爱她是多么的深沉。李三郎:“如果我说,我从一开始就没想要你做我的棋子,你信么?”幺妹:“我信!”她半倚在他的怀里,“相公,坊间都说你这复仇皇子当的一点都不称职,唾手可得的江山不要,还要为一个丑的不能再丑的女人自杀,都说你有病。”话落某男已欺上身,”娘子,我有没有病,你试试不就知道了?“
  • 一夜惊喜:男神,轻点吻

    一夜惊喜:男神,轻点吻

    “女人,我司徒南想要得到的东西,还没有失手过,包括你。”一不小心惹上了腹黑总裁司徒南,从此,成了他冠名的妻子。白天的他霸道无情,手段残忍,惹到了他只有两个字---毁灭。但夜晚却化身成了宠妻狂魔,对苏沫百般宠爱。不惜撒娇卖萌耍无赖,也要将她牢牢绑在怀中。“老婆,这空调太热,来把衣服脱了。”某男悄悄把空调温度调到最高。“……”“今生我司徒南只有一个妻子,就是你。”“……”正在感动之际的苏沫再一次被吃的干净。这个高冷男神究竟是谁家的,快快领走。
  • 龙腾九洲之无极

    龙腾九洲之无极

    自世界政府解体以后,华夏分九大洲以及诸多小洲和偏洲各自各个政府诸多民间势力为政,除了私有政府,还有包括学院,家族,军团,帮派,隐藏组织等等...在这乱世的年代里,终于他们等来黎明的时光.
  • 无道迷途

    无道迷途

    神州大地,人杰地灵。修真一脉,奇才辈出。逆天而行,冲破苍穹。试问谁能化羽升仙,谁能问鼎乾坤?这条路究竟是个陷阱,还是死路一条?无道迷途。
  • 倾世血帝:星耀天下

    倾世血帝:星耀天下

    叶黎雨,骄傲的逗比一枚,但也是血猎的霸气族长,却因一次意外被转化为血族的哥哥打落悬崖,再次醒来的她发现异世自己已死,她将替‘她’完成余下的使命。叶宸勋,血族帝王,身为西涵国师,却千方百计地接近她,潜伏在她身边,不料却深深迷恋上她。谁说血族冷漠无情,嗜血如命,那是因为他们有一颗缺少温暖的心。一场血族与血猎的爱情会让他们命悬一线,万蚁嗜心。可那又怎样,就让他们携手解开亘古不变的诅咒,让着原本黯淡的星光闪耀天下!!
  • 萧红小说集

    萧红小说集

    萧红,1911年6月2日出生于黑龙江省呼兰河县的一个封建地主官吏家庭,原名张迺莹,笔名萧红、悄吟等。