登陆注册
14198700000051

第51章 SYLVIA OF THE LETTERS.(7)

"It seems to have agreed with you," he repeated, smiling.

"It's all right now," she answered. "It was a bit of a struggle at first."

"Yes," he agreed. "Life doesn't temper the wind to the human lamb.

But was there any need in your case?" he asked. "I thought--"

"Oh, that all went," she explained. "Except the house."

"I'm sorry," said Matthew. "I didn't know."

"Oh, we have been a couple of pigs," she laughed, replying to his thoughts. "I did sometimes think of writing you. I kept the address you gave me. Not for any assistance; I wanted to fight it out for myself. But I was a bit lonely."

"Why didn't you?" he asked.

She hesitated for a moment.

"It's rather soon to make up one's mind," she said, "but you seem to me to have changed. Your voice sounds so different. But as a boy-- well, you were a bit of a prig, weren't you? I imagined you writing me good advice and excellent short sermons. And it wasn't that that I was wanting."

"I think I understand," he said. "I'm glad you got through.

"What is your line?" he asked. "Journalism?"

"No," she answered. "Too self-opinionated."

She opened a bureau that had always been her own and handed him a programme. "Miss Ann Kavanagh, Contralto," was announced on it as one of the chief attractions.

"I didn't know you had a voice," said Matthew.

"You used to complain of it," she reminded him.

"Your speaking voice," he corrected her. "And it wasn't the quality of that I objected to. It was the quantity."

She laughed.

"Yes, we kept ourselves pretty busy bringing one another up," she admitted.

They talked a while longer: of Abner and his kind, quaint ways; of old friends. Ann had lost touch with most of them. She had studied singing in Brussels, and afterwards her master had moved to London and she had followed him. She had only just lately returned to New York.

The small servant entered to clear away the tea things. She said she thought that Ann had rung. Her tone implied that anyhow it was time she had. Matthew rose and Ann held out her hand.

"I shall be at the concert," he said.

"It isn't till next week," Ann reminded him.

"Oh, I'm not in any particular hurry," said Matthew. "Are you generally in of an afternoon?"

"Sometimes," said Ann.

He thought as he sat watching her from his stall that she was one of the most beautiful women he had ever seen. Her voice was not great.

She had warned him not to expect too much.

"It will never set the Thames on fire," she had said. "I thought at first that it would. But such as it is I thank God for it."

It was worth that. It was sweet and clear and had a tender quality.

Matthew waited for her at the end. She was feeling well disposed towards all creatures and accepted his suggestion of supper with gracious condescension.

He had called on her once or twice during the preceding days. It was due to her after his long neglect of her, he told himself, and had found improvement in her. But to-night she seemed to take a freakish pleasure in letting him see that there was much of the old Ann still left in her: the frank conceit of her; the amazing self-opinionatedness of her; the waywardness, the wilfulness, the unreasonableness of her; the general uppishness and dictatorialness of her; the contradictoriness and flat impertinence of her; the swift temper and exasperating tongue of her.

It was almost as if she were warning him. "You see, I am not changed, except, as you say, in appearance. I am still Ann with all the old faults and failings that once made life in the same house with me a constant trial to you. Just now my very imperfections appear charms. You have been looking at the sun--at the glory of my face, at the wonder of my arms and hands. Your eyes are blinded.

But that will pass. And underneath I am still Ann. Just Ann."

They had quarrelled in the cab on the way home. He forgot what it was about, but Ann had said some quite rude things, and her face not being there in the darkness to excuse her, it had made him very angry. She had laughed again on the steps, and they had shaken hands. But walking home through the still streets Sylvia had plucked at his elbow.

What fools we mortals be--especially men! Here was a noble woman--a restful, understanding, tenderly loving woman; a woman as nearly approaching perfection as it was safe for a woman to go! This marvellous woman was waiting for him with outstretched arms (why should he doubt it?)--and just because Nature had at last succeeded in making a temporary success of Ann's skin and had fashioned a rounded line above her shoulder-blade! It made him quite cross with himself. Ten years ago she had been gawky and sallow-complexioned.

Ten years hence she might catch the yellow jaundice and lose it all.

Passages in Sylvia's letters returned to him. He remembered that far-off evening in his Paris attic when she had knocked at his door with her great gift of thanks. Recalled how her soft shadow hand had stilled his pain. He spent the next two days with Sylvia. He re-read all her letters, lived again the scenes and moods in which he had replied to them.

Her personality still defied the efforts of his imagination, but he ended by convincing himself that he would know her when he saw her.

But counting up the women on Fifth Avenue towards whom he had felt instinctively drawn, and finding that the number had already reached eleven, began to doubt his intuition. On the morning of the third day he met Ann by chance in a bookseller's shop. Her back was towards him. She was glancing through Aston Rowant's latest volume.

"What I," said the cheerful young lady who was attending to her, "like about him is that he understands women so well."

"What I like about him," said Ann, "is that he doesn't pretend to."

"There's something in that," agreed the cheerful young lady. "They say he's here in New York."

Ann looked up.

"So I've been told," said the cheerful young lady.

"I wonder what he's like?" said Ann.

"He wrote for a long time under another name," volunteered the cheerful young lady. "He's quite an elderly man."

It irritated Matthew. He spoke without thinking.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 时简娇养的绿萝娘子

    时简娇养的绿萝娘子

    风华雪月何时了,我要做回一只鸟。小楼昨夜又东风,王爷尽在掌握中。雕栏玉砌朱颜在,只是皇帝改。问君能有几多愁,不如边关喂黄牛。一个玲珑俏皮的鹦鹉穿越成阁老孙女与低情商呆萌王爷不得不说的故事。
  • 风云侠客传

    风云侠客传

    爱恨情仇,江湖义气,神功利器,宵小手段。在这个地方的种种纠葛或光明磊落或阴暗晦涩,一幕幕刀光剑影的背后,皆是一段段荡气回肠的故事.....
  • 旭日残阳

    旭日残阳

    陈旭原本是一个工地普通的技术员,一觉醒来,人类变成了嗜血的野兽,感染病毒,是堕落还是拯救?面对亲情、友情、爱情又该如何抉择?
  • 绿林老大

    绿林老大

    这个威风凛凛的大汉一见了王重翻身便拜,口中叫道:“哥哥,请收我上山。”……
  • 游龙赋

    游龙赋

    在这玄者兽师为尊的世上,乱世将至!身负血海深仇的少年遇到了那个魔,此次,我的刀就是魔!我是游龙,遨游在乱世之中,且随我见证一代刀魔的坎坷一生!
  • 网王之心中的歌

    网王之心中的歌

    小说主角冰颖在踏进一个网球场时,华丽丽的穿越了,而且是魂穿,还是超自恋水仙花的妹妹,在平淡而又不平凡的生活中,她将于王子们发生怎样的故事呢?本人为写作新手,初来乍到,请各位多多包涵,第一次写文,不喜勿喷。
  • 友谊赠言(现代名言妙语全集)

    友谊赠言(现代名言妙语全集)

    作为人生的追求者,茫茫人海,关键在于找到属于自己的名家导师,关键在于找到鼓舞自己的名言警句,当然,最关键的是在这些金玉良言的指导下付诸切实的行动。
  • 六号摩天轮的幸福(摩天轮童话系列)

    六号摩天轮的幸福(摩天轮童话系列)

    [花雨授权]?他是知名摄影师又怎样?就代表他可以目中无人、对人大小声吗?她偏偏不吃这套,她绝对要好好教导他“做人处事”的基本态度!什么!?他竟然是她身价上亿的顶头上司!更惨的是——他还叫她当他“贴身助理”!?
  • 修真之校园奇才

    修真之校园奇才

    在得知自己患上绝症的时候,柳辰就感觉自己的世界变得灰暗,直到他遇上那个人,那个让他对生命有了重新认识的人。那个人看在他资质不错的份上,愿意把自己的独门绝技传授给他。从此世界开始改变,人们的意识也有着质的突变。而他也一步步走向了强者巅峰。
  • 初如心

    初如心

    愿有情人终成眷属!戴信伦终于鼓起勇气说出。戴信伦“做我女朋友吧!“蓝鱼雁羞赧逃跑。...戴信伦终于如愿蓝鱼雁成为女友,带上女友见家长去了。“叔叔,我是戴信伦,我请求您同意蓝鱼雁做我女朋友!”