登陆注册
15466900000163

第163章 CHAPTER THE FORTY-SEVENTH(2)

As the train rolled out of the station, I, the enemy of priests, began to make myself agreeable to _this_ priest. He was young and shy--but I conquered him. Just as the other travelers were beginning (with the exception of Oscar) to compose themselves to sleep, I put my case to the clergyman. "A and B, sir, lady and gentleman, both of age, leave one place in England, and go to live in another place, on the fifth of this month--how soon, if you please, can they be lawfully married after that?"

"I presume you mean in church?" said the young clergyman.

"In church, of course." (To that extent I believed I might answer for Lucilla, without any fear of making a mistake.)

"They may be married by License," said the clergyman--"provided one of them continues to reside in that other place to which they traveled on the fifth--on the twenty-first, or (possibly) even the twentieth of this month."

"Not before?"

"Certainly not before."

It was then the night of the seventeenth. I gave my companion's hand a little squeeze in the dark. Here was a glimpse of encouragement to cheer us on the journey. Before the marriage could take place, we should be in England. "We have time before us," I whispered to Oscar. "We will save Lucilla yet."

"Shall we find Lucilla?" was all he whispered back.

I had forgotten that serious difficulty. No answer to Oscar's question could possibly present itself until we reached the rectory. Between this and then, there was nothing for it but to keep patience and to keep hope.

I refrain from encumbering this part of my narrative with any detailed account of the little accidents, lucky and unlucky, which alternately hastened or retarded our journey home. Let me only say that, before midnight on the eighteenth, Oscar and I drove up to the rectory gate.

Mr. Finch himself came out to receive us, with a lamp in his hand. He lifted his eyes (and his lamp) devotionally to the sky when he saw Oscar.

The two first words he said, were:--"Inscrutable Providence!"

"Have you found Lucilla?" I asked.

Mr. Finch--with his whole attention fixed on Oscar--wrung my hand mechanically, and said I was a "good creature;" much as he might have patted, and spoken to, Oscar's companion, if the companion had been a dog. I almost wished myself that animal for the moment--I should have had the privilege of biting Mr. Finch. Oscar impatiently repeated my question; the rector, at the time, officiously assisting him to descend from the carriage, and leaving me to get out as I could.

"Did you hear Madame Pratolungo?" Oscar asked. "Is Lucilla found?"

"Dear Oscar, we hope to find her, now you have come."

That answer revealed to me the secret of Mr. Finch's extraordinary politeness to his young friend. The last chance, as things were, of preventing Lucilla's marriage to a man who had squandered away every farthing of his money, was the chance of Oscar's arrival in England before the ceremony could take place. The measure of Oscar's importance to Mr. Finch was now, more literally than ever, the measure of Oscar's fortune.

I asked for news of Grosse as we went in. The rector actually found some comparatively high notes in his prodigious voice, to express his amazement at my audacity in speaking to him of anybody but Oscar.

"Oh, dear, dear me!" cried Mr. Finch, impatiently conceding to me one precious moment of his attention. "Don't bother about Grosse! Grosse is ill in London. There is a note for you from Grosse.--Take care of the door-step, dear Oscar," he went on, in his deepest and gravest bass notes. "Mrs. Finch is so anxious to see you. We have both looked forward to your arrival with such eager hope--such impatient affection, so to speak. Let me put down your hat. Ah! how you must have suffered! Share my trust in an all-wise Providence, and meet this trial with cheerful submission as I do. All is not lost yet. Bear up! bear up!" He threw open the parlor door. "Mrs. Finch! compose yourself. Our dear adopted son. Our afflicted Oscar!"

Is it necessary to say what Mrs. Finch was about, and how Mrs. Finch looked?

There were the three unchangeable institutions--the novel, the baby, and the missing pocket-handkerchief There was the gaudy jacket over the long trailing dressing-gown--and the damp lady inside them, damp as ever!

Receiving Oscar with a mouth drawn down at the corners, and a head that shook sadly in sympathy with him, Mrs. Finch's face underwent a most extraordinary transformation when she turned my way next. To my astonishment, her dim eyes actually sparkled; a broad smile of irrepressible contentment showed itself cunningly to _me,_ in place of the dismal expression which had welcomed Oscar. Holding up the baby in triumph, the lady of the rectory whispered these words in my ear:--"What do you think he has done since you have been away?"

"I really don't know," I answered.

"He has cut two teeth! Put your finger in and feel."

Others might bewail the family misfortune. The family triumph filled the secret mind of Mrs. Finch, to the exclusion of every other earthly consideration. I put my finger in as instructed, and got instantly bitten by the ferocious baby. But for a new outburst of the rector's voice at the moment, Mrs. Finch (if I am any judge of physiognomy) must have certainly relieved herself by a scream of delight. As it was, she opened her mouth; and (having lost her handkerchief as already stated) retired into a corner, and gagged herself with the baby.

In the meantime, Mr. Finch had produced from a cupboard near the fireplace, two letters. The first he threw down impatiently on the table.

"Oh, dear, dear! what a nuisance other people's letters are!" The second he handled with extraordinary care; offering it to Oscar with a heavy sigh, and with eyes that turned up martyr-like to the ceiling. "Rouse yourself, and read it," said Mr. Finch in his most pathetic pulpit tones.

"I would have spared you, Oscar, if I could. All our hopes depend, dear boy, on what you can say to guide us when you have read those lines."

同类推荐
  • 三部律抄一卷

    三部律抄一卷

    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。
  • 奸劫弑臣

    奸劫弑臣

    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。
  • 揵稚梵赞

    揵稚梵赞

    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。
  • 古意

    古意

    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。
  • 法华玄赞义决

    法华玄赞义决

    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
  • 蠢萌姑娘被校草盯上了

    蠢萌姑娘被校草盯上了

    “哎我去,咋就看上了你这么个吃货。”“大不了你把我休了。”“才不要!”
  • 我被美女上身了

    我被美女上身了

    想真正地活着么?想体验一下无所顾忌、腰缠万贯、一呼百应的生活么?姜潮与性感美丽的女鬼林子涵共身后,生活发生翻天覆地的变化。跑车、别墅?这算什么,我有的是钱!无可匹敌、超越人类认知的异能?没关系,都会有!收服异能者、黑势力,组建富可敌国的大公司,这个传奇,等你来见证!这一次,主角的命运由我们来共同决定!
  • 回味之爱

    回味之爱

    爱情之间,仇恨之间,谁?重要。失去的东西,找的回来吗?
  • 邪神笑苍天

    邪神笑苍天

    夜时生来心志坚,一身痞气不等闲。人生在世需精彩,且看邪神笑苍天。世间没有公平,我就给他个公平。世间恶人太多,我便屠他个干净。世间本没有魔,逼我太多,这个魔便由我来做!管他世人无尽白眼。管他天下无穷叫骂!我只求问心无愧!我只求笑尽苍天!欢迎加入邪神笑苍天书友群,群号码:594487761
  • 高达立于约会之上

    高达立于约会之上

    这一卷是前传【真飞鸟在AST】,是真那卷的上半部分,总之就是真还在用CR-Unit的时期,卷首语等后半在写。学园都市和高达与约会的揉合,重度中二病。作者初三学生党,只能假期更新。
  • 女孩,走好青春期的第一步

    女孩,走好青春期的第一步

    青春期是青少年生理发育和心理发展急剧变化的时期,是童年向成年过渡的时期。通常,人们把青春期与儿童期加以明显区分,区分的界限是性的成熟。对于女孩来说,性成熟的标志是月经初潮,即第一次来月经。以性成熟为核心的生理方面的发展,使青春期女孩具有了与儿童时期所明显不同的社会和心理特征。而这一时期女孩在面对内在和外在的种种变化时,内心总是有着不同程度的不安。有的害怕孤独,有的不与人交往,有的过于自卑等等。
  • 国家宝藏之龙脉

    国家宝藏之龙脉

    “而我们就是搞风水的,但是我们算是比较高级的,我们不是去寻找墓穴之地,我们是要去寻找龙脉,得龙脉着必定大富大贵。夫龙脉,大国之运势走向,游荡于山水之间,飘忽间而常隐于世,得龙脉之人得之于天下。龙脉,就是运!”赖老突然间在“龙脉,就是运!”“晕,时间快到了。”赖老摆动手中的拂尘,“我直接切入正题吧,赖天宝,你是当年赖布衣南下广西的时候的私生子的后代!”
  • 对战都市

    对战都市

    “你是一个值得尊敬的对手。为了表示我对你的敬意,我会用出我最强的一招,希望你能接下来。”哼,你的最强一招的确不差。不过,最后输的一定会是你!”突然,一个面无表情的少女闯到了正在装……咳咳……闯到了正在狠刷时髦值的两人中间,对着其中一个看起来懒洋洋的青年说道:“苏苏,我饿了。”“哦,阿离你等等,打完这一把我就去做饭。”“苏苏,我~饿~了~”“等等啊阿离,我马上就去做饭!别拔网线啊啊啊啊啊!”
  • 重生之看我七十二变

    重生之看我七十二变

    看我七十二变,亮瞎你的钛合金狗眼。蜕变史从此开始,从普通路人甲变成顶尖校花,从学渣变成学霸,从弱智变成绝世天才,哦不,是鬼才,从矮冬瓜变成水仙花,从天真变成冷静沉着,从任人宰割的鱼肉变成道上最不能招惹的人,从被人看扁变成无人敢轻视的商业第一人......小看我,就让你看个够...翻手为云覆手为雨也只是小kiss...独宠:私生女的七十二变
  • 双子星公主之星辰心愿

    双子星公主之星辰心愿

    新的力量,新的危险……花音的属性“光”究竟有什么用?是什么?恋情也发芽中……