登陆注册
15753200000006

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
  • 三论元旨

    三论元旨

    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。
  • 佛说十善业道经

    佛说十善业道经

    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。
  • 直斋书录解题

    直斋书录解题

    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。
  • 注法华本迹十不二门

    注法华本迹十不二门

    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。
  • 无上依经

    无上依经

    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
  • 轻衣随风,我在等你

    轻衣随风,我在等你

    一代帝王,却偏爱一个女子;女子竟还是自己哥哥的妻子;他说;若喧,我真的很爱你,你本就该是我的;她笑道;辰逸你若真爱我我,就不该来打扰我,让我安安静静的过日子,却不想这话竟让他愤怒、道;哼,我告诉你就算你不爱我,我也会把你留在我身边,直到你死,也要陪着我。
  • 亦玉堂稿

    亦玉堂稿

    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。
  • 惊世天女:腹黑公子请下嫁

    惊世天女:腹黑公子请下嫁

    不写了,不知道云起为嘛连签约都不让了,所以这本书不写了
  • 穿越驭鬼狂妃

    穿越驭鬼狂妃

    皇甫月,鬼界灵使,没想到却在打死一只恶鬼后被一根绳子绊倒,溺死在湖中,穿越了。什么,她有婚约在身,哼,做皇妃她不屑,可是怎么会这样,她身上婚约都还没来得及取消,就被一个大无赖缠上,夺取她的初吻她还免费得到了一个不要钱的抱枕,不过……为毛他会是她未来的小叔子!【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 神斗士

    神斗士

    神斗士:身怀逆天灵根,参悟天地造化,苍穹之下傲视群雄。陆小天:莫欺少年穷,我要干翻的就是这苍穹!
  • 某幻想的无限之旅

    某幻想的无限之旅

    作为一个烂大街的穿越者,某人光荣的分尸过黑恶势力丘比,揍过魔王拯救世界,但某人志不在此,他渴求无限的精彩,只追逐平凡的故乡,但无限的归途之中,伴随着他越发强大,能够轻易的处理各种麻烦,他骤然发现,事情开始变得不太对劲...
  • 系统大战

    系统大战

    一开始,我什么都没想,不过是杀了一只大猫。然后,就只能往前走了。其实也没什么不好,总归是一直着走,一步两步……
  • 铭我一生

    铭我一生

    现实生活中,曾彷徨,曾迷茫,直到发现那个藏在心里的我……
  • 重生闻仲

    重生闻仲

    洪荒破碎,许多大能沉睡或者逝去,各种族领袖们试图建立新的秩序。闻仲险死还生,闯入这个传说中的世界……
  • 孤旅

    孤旅

    这部诗集着意内在情思的直白坦露,并蕴含着诗人独特的生命体验和高扬的生命意识,长于用平实的生活语言暗喻哲理,又以意象符号创造艺术意境,因之这些诗超越了繁复的意象而实现了更高层面上的语义简约,使之成为淡泊诗人独抒性灵的精神自传。