登陆注册
15451400000012

第12章 CHAPTER III(1)

JEEKIE TELLS A TALE

The Court, Mr. Champers-Haswell's place, was a very fine house indeed, of a sort. That is, it contained twenty-nine bedrooms, each of them with a bathroom attached, a large number of sitting-rooms, ample garages, stables, and offices, the whole surrounded by several acres of newly-planted gardens. Incidentally it may be mentioned that it was built in the most atrocious taste and looked like a suburban villa seen through a magnifying glass.

It was in this matter of taste that it differed from Sir Robert Aylward's home, Old Hall, a few miles away. Not that this was old either, for the original house had fallen down or been burnt a hundred years before. But Sir Robert, being gifted with artistic perception, had reared up in place of it a smaller but really beautiful dwelling of soft grey stone, long and low, and built in the Tudor style with many gables.

This house, charming as it was, could not of course compare with Yarleys, the ancient seat of the Vernons in the same neighbourhood.

Yarleys was pure Elizabethan, although it contained an oak-roofed hall which was said to date back to the time of King John, a remnant of a former house. There was no electric light or other modern convenience at Yarleys, yet it was a place that everyone went to see because of its exceeding beauty and its historical associations. The moat by which it was surrounded, the grass court within, for it was built on three sides of a square, the mullioned windows, the towered gateway of red brick, the low-panelled rooms hung with the portraits of departed Vernons, the sloping park and the splendid oaks that stood about, singly or in groups, were all of them perfect in their way. It was one of the most lovely of English homes, and oddly enough its neglected gardens and the air of decay that pervaded it, added to rather than decreased its charm.

But it is with The Court that we have to do at present, not with Yarleys. Mr. Champers-Haswell had a week-end party. There were ten guests, all men, and with the exception of Alan, who it will be remembered was one of them, all rich and in business. They included two French bankers and three Jews, everyone a prop of the original Sahara Syndicate and deeply interested in the forthcoming flotation.

To describe them is unnecessary, for they have no part in our story, being only financiers of a certain class, remarkable for the riches they had acquired by means that for the most part would not bear examination. The riches were evident enough. Ever since the morning the owners of this wealth had arrived by ones or twos in their costly motorcars, attended by smart chauffeurs and valets. Their fur coats, their jewelled studs and rings, something in their very faces suggested money, which indeed was the bond that brought and held them together.

Alan did not come until it was time to dress for dinner, for he knew that Barbara would not appear before that meal, and it was her society he sought, not that of his host or fellow guests. Accompanied by his negro servant, Jeekie, for in a house like this it was necessary to have someone to wait upon him, he drove over from Yarleys, a distance of ten miles, arriving about eight o'clock.

"Mr. Haswell as gone up to dress, Major, and so have the other gentlemen," said the head butler, Mr. Smith, "but Miss Champers told me to give you this note and to say that dinner is at half-past eight."

Alan took the note and asked to be shown to his room. Once there, although he had only five and twenty minutes, he opened it eagerly, while Jeekie unpacked his bag.

"Dear Alan," it ran: "Don't be late for dinner, or I may not be able to keep a place next to me. Of course Sir Robert takes me in.

They are a worse lot than usual this time, odious--odious!--and I can't stand one on the left hand as well as on the right. Yours, "B.

"P.S. What /have/ you been doing? Our distinguished guests, to say nothing of my uncle, seem to be in a great fuss about you. I overheard them talking when I was pretending to arrange some flowers. One of them called you a sanctimonious prig and an obstinate donkey, and another answered--I think it was Sir Robert --'No doubt, but obstinate donkeys can kick and have been known to upset other people's applecarts ere now.' Is the Sahara Syndicate the applecart? If so, I'll forgive you.

"P.P.S. Remember that we will walk to church together to-morrow, but come down to breakfast in knickerbockers or something to put them off, and I'll do the same--I mean I'll dress as if I were going to golf. We can turn into Christians later. If we don't-- dress like that, I mean--they'll guess and all want to come to church, except the Jews, which would bring the judgment of Heaven on us.

"P.P.P.S. Don't be careless and leave this note lying about, for the under-footman who waits upon you reads all the letters. He steams them over a kettle. Smith the butler is the only respectable man in this house."

Alan laughed outright as he finished this peculiar and outspoken epistle, which somehow revived his spirits, that since the previous day had been low enough. It refreshed him. It was like a breath of frosty air from an open window blowing clean and cold into a scented, overheated room. He would have liked to keep it, but remembering Barbara's injunctions and the under-footman, threw it onto the fire and watched it burn. Jeekie coughed to intimate that it was time for his master to dress, and Alan turned and looked at him in an absent- minded fashion.

He was worth looking at, was Jeekie. Let the reader imagine a very tall and powerfully-built negro with a skin as black as a well- polished boot, woolly hair as white as snow, a little tufted beard also white, a hand like a leg of mutton, but with long delicate fingers and pink, filbert-shaped nails, an immovable countenance, but set in it beneath a massive brow, two extraordinary humorous and eloquent black eyes which expressed every emotion passing through the brain behind them, that is when their owner chose to allow them to do so. Such was Jeekie.

同类推荐
  • 黄宗羲梨洲文

    黄宗羲梨洲文

    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。
  • 成唯识论了义灯

    成唯识论了义灯

    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。
  • 孔子家语

    孔子家语

    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。
  • 石城山志

    石城山志

    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。
  • 贪欢报

    贪欢报

    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
  • 限量萝莉:逮捕偷心萌物

    限量萝莉:逮捕偷心萌物

    “追你,是为了得到你!”她是萌萌哒的偷心小女贼,尾随美男一大堆。他是她的守护神,除了他,没人可以得到她!“拜托你放过我可以吗?”小女贼苦苦哀求,“偷心,是要负责任的。”他把她逼近墙角,拥怀烙吻。她睁着萌萌哒的大眼睛,一脸无辜地看着他“你吻我几次了?”他清冷一笑,“不多,还差一次就能凑个三位数了。”【看四大美男谁能俘获偷心小女贼的心,各种萌,无限萌~~~】
  • 千玺爱

    千玺爱

    这是tfboys与Bgirls的修改版请各位多多支持
  • 末世之无尽生存

    末世之无尽生存

    生存,人类可以为了一块面包,一口水,杀人;这只是因为,末世来临。黑暗中,我只能为了那块面包,一口水活下去,我会踩着尸骨来证明我只是想活下去。
  • 在我的夏日中遇见你

    在我的夏日中遇见你

    她与他混在一个圈,却相隔甚远,他是b站著名的翻唱大神,她却是一个小透明,偶尔的一次机会,他们相识.............
  • 绝世倾仙

    绝世倾仙

    她,静时宛若谪仙临尘,不食烟火,高傲冷漠,拒人千里之外,她,动时犹如魔女出世,手段狠辣,所过之处浮尸万里。她,只是一个普通的女孩,她,是史上最惊艳的女帝,也是,史上最强的魔女,她,要为一族三百零八口人命复仇,所以!她,走上了修行之路……。
  • 仙邪神游

    仙邪神游

    一剑震九州,一指断山河一笑邪倾城,一人孤傲绝我本于心,与邪为伍,邪气凛然
  • 吾为魔神

    吾为魔神

    一个城市小混混,一句咒语开始了他堪称奇迹的生活.......来到一个血腥的恐怖世界,一个神奇的世界,一个到处充满危险气息的世界。他在这个世界不断成长,变强。无敌的桃花运,超强的实力,阴人的功夫天下无敌,这就是他。
  • 北大财商课

    北大财商课

    赚钱不能光凭智商、情商,关键还要看财商!智商,能令您聪明;情商,町决定命运;财商,可以为您赚取百万、千万、亿万……《中国平安国人财商指数报告(2011)》显示,中国人财商指数刚过及格线;而在北京大学企业家俱乐部成立仪式上,北京大学校长周其凤表示,北大共诞生了79位亿万富翁,连续三年高居内地高校首位。北京大学当之无愧为我国“造富能力”最强的大学,其培养的学生不仅具备高智商,更具备高财商。《北大财商课》精选了北大校友中最具代表性的亿万富豪案例,在这里他们将向您展现成功可以复制,财商更可以学习和后天培养。《北大财商课》的作者是曹荣、刘操。
  • 无声的群落:续编(上卷)

    无声的群落:续编(上卷)

    作者都是1964年和1965年从北京、上海、重庆、沈阳、武汉、成都、长沙、杭州、西安等地下乡的知青,目前散居在全国二十余个城市和海外,一个共同的夙愿将这些素昧平生的人们凝聚到一起,共同续写了中国知青史中一段起伏跌宕的开篇。作为上山下乡运动的先行者,“文革”前知青是一个具有特色的群体。他们出生于人民共和国诞生前后,成长于社会政治意识形态最纯正,也*影响力的年代。其中的大多数因家庭出身不好而被剥夺了学习和就业的权利,不得不到农村去“脱胎换骨”。
  • 风雨雷电

    风雨雷电

    我们每天都要面对各种各样的天气,而风雨雷电是我们早已习惯的自然现象。为什么天空中时而狂风肆虐,时而暴雨倾盆时而又雷雨交加呢?这些奇妙的自然现象形成的原因是多种多样的,它们有着各自的特点以及不同的表现形式。一方面我们可以利用这些自然现象为我们的生产和生活提供帮助,另一方面它们所产生的自然灾害也时常威胁着我们的生产和生活。