登陆注册
15479600000007

第7章 A MERCURY OF THE FOOT-HILLS(7)

At which she laughed too, and tripped away.

Leonidas went back and caught his trout. But even this triumph did not remove a vague sense of disappointment which had come over him.

He had often pictured to himself a Heaven-sent meeting with her in the woods, a walk with her, alone, where he could pick her the rarest flowers and herbs and show her his woodland friends; and it had only ended in this, and an exhibition of William Henry! He ought to have saved HER from something, and not her husband. Yet he had no ill-feeling for Burroughs, only a desire to circumvent him, on behalf of the unprotected, as he would have baffled a hawk or a wildcat. He went home in dismal spirits, but later that evening constructed a boyish letter of thanks to the apocryphal Belcher and told him all about--the trout!

He brought her his letter the next day, and received hers to inclose. She was pleasant, her own charming self again, but she seemed more interested in other things than himself, as, for instance, the docile William Henry, whose hiding-place he showed, and whose few tricks she made him exhibit to her, and which the gratified Leonidas accepted as a delicate form of flattery to himself. But his yearning, innocent spirit detected a something lacking, which he was too proud to admit even to himself. It was his own fault; he ought to have waited for her, and not gone for the trout!

So a fortnight passed with an interchange of the vicarious letters, and brief, hopeful, and disappointing meetings to Leonidas. To add to his unhappiness, he was obliged to listen to sneering disparagement of his goddess from his family, and criticisms which, happily, his innocence did not comprehend. It was his own mother who accused her of shamefully "making up" to the good-looking expressman at church last Sunday, and declared that Burroughs ought to "look after that wife of his,"--two statements which the simple Leonidas could not reconcile. He had seen the incident, and only thought her more lovely than ever. Why should not the expressman think so too? And yet the boy was not happy; something intruded upon his sports, upon his books, making them dull and vapid, and yet that something was she! He grew pale and preoccupied. If he had only some one in whom to confide--some one who could explain his hopes and fears. That one was nearer than he thought!

It was quite three weeks since the rattlesnake incident, and he was wandering moodily over Casket Ridge. He was near the Casket, that abrupt upheaval of quartz and gneiss, shaped like a coffer, from which the mountain took its name. It was a favorite haunt of Leonidas, one of whose boyish superstitions was that it contained a treasure of gold, and one of whose brightest dreams had been that he should yet discover it. This he did not do to-day, but looking up from the rocks that he was listlessly examining, he made the almost as thrilling discovery that near him on the trail was a distinguished-looking stranger.

He was bestriding a shapely mustang, which well became his handsome face and slight, elegant figure, and he was looking at Leonidas with an amused curiosity and a certain easy assurance that were difficult to withstand. It was with the same fascinating self-confidence of smile, voice, and manner that he rode up to the boy, and leaning lightly over his saddle, said with exaggerated politeness: "I believe I have the pleasure of addressing Mr. Leonidas Boone?"

The rising color in Leonidas's face was apparently a sufficient answer to the stranger, for he continued smilingly, "Then permit me to introduce myself as Mr. James Belcher. As you perceive, I have grown considerably since you last saw me. In fact, I've done nothing else. It's surprising what a fellow can do when he sets his mind on one thing. And then, you know, they're always telling you that San Francisco is a 'growing place.' That accounts for it!"

Leonidas, dazed, dazzled, but delighted, showed all his white teeth in a shy laugh. At which the enchanting stranger leaped from his horse like a very boy, drew his arm through the rein, and going up to Leonidas, lifted the boy's straw hat from his head and ran his fingers through his curls. There was nothing original in that--everybody did that to him as a preliminary to conversation. But when this ingenuous fine gentleman put his own Panama hat on Leonidas's head, and clapped Leonidas's torn straw on his own, and, passing his arm through the boy's, began to walk on with him, Leonidas's simple heart went out to him at once.

"And now, Leon," said the delightful stranger, "let's you and me have a talk. There's a nice cool spot under these laurels; I'll stake out Pepita, and we'll just lie off there and gab, and not care if school keeps or not."

"But you know you ain't really Jim Belcher," said the boy shyly.

"I'm as good a man as he is any day, whoever I am," said the stranger, with humorous defiance, "and can lick him out of his boots, whoever HE is. That ought to satisfy you. But if you want my certificate, here's your own letter, old man," he said, producing Leonidas's last scrawl from his pocket.

"And HERS?" said the boy cautiously.

The stranger's face changed a little. "And HERS," he repeated gravely, showing a little pink note which Leonidas recognized as one of Mrs. Burroughs's inclosures. The boy was silent until they reached the laurels, where the stranger tethered his horse and then threw himself in an easy attitude beneath the tree, with the back of his head upon his clasped hands. Leonidas could see his curved brown mustaches and silky lashes that were almost as long, and thought him the handsomest man he had ever beheld.

"Well, Leon," said the stranger, stretching himself out comfortably and pulling the boy down beside him, "how are things going on the Casket? All serene, eh?"

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 校园小甜心:校草,你别跑

    校园小甜心:校草,你别跑

    女孩:我与他无故相遇。某男:我与她冤家路窄。。。。。。。。。。。当女孩发呆时,某男总会说小心着凉。当女孩吃糖时,某男总会说小心噎着。当女孩喝水时,某男总会说小心呛到。女孩撅着嘴.:你就不想着我好?某男:我是关心你。。。。。。某男随着女孩的目光看去:看什么想什么呢?女孩:看帅哥,想帅哥。某男摆正女孩的头:以后只能看我一个想我一个!
  • 中州烟雨

    中州烟雨

    贺新帝,思旧朝。二十年也把那兴亡看饱。恋富贵,功名怎相抛?恨世间,不能名利双收好。叹一声罢了。脱却紫蟒袍,幽云连相邀。锄耕林木随野老,青山苍翠,林间晚照。
  • 梦里会否花开

    梦里会否花开

    土气傻女的爱情遭遇,是暗恋自己多年抑郁气质的尾随者?还是深爱深宠甜蜜相处的高材生?亦或是让人心动的怀男神?
  • 李桑儿

    李桑儿

    见义勇为遇到人生真爱,以为可以和这个男人相依相守,却不料突来的车祸带走了所有的美梦,为报仇忍辱负重,心死入狱,人生再回不到从前,是谁拯救了她
  • 舔疤的独角兽

    舔疤的独角兽

    曾经问过一个朋友,男生会比较容易喜欢长得特别漂亮却长得胖的女生还是会喜欢长得丑却身材好的女生,他说我俗气,喜欢这种事是要夹杂着感情了,那么,毁了容但却明朗的女孩子还有资格去爱吗,这本书是个真实故事,希望会因为这个故事能让大家勇敢去爱,真正的爱情与外表无关,男女之间也真的不会有纯友谊。
  • tfboys:源心薄荷蜜爱恋

    tfboys:源心薄荷蜜爱恋

    “七岁时,你是我的奇迹”“十岁时,你是我的全世界”“十三岁时,你是我每个明天”“十六岁时,你是我写在开头情书的第一个名字”......“我喜欢你的笑容,喜欢你的甜,我喜欢你开心的时候叫我源哥哥,喜欢你不开心闹脾气的时候叫我坏蛋,因为我知道我是你的唯一。”“你离开后,属于你的秋千从没人坐过”“你回来了,属于你的秋千,终于有人坐了”“其实很简单,其实很自然,两个人的爱由两人分担.....”属于你的薄荷,你源永远知道。宠文1v1,男女主身心健康。(不弃坑?)(会断更?)(茵茵人很好?)茵茵微博:茵源薄荷
  • 道之迹

    道之迹

    一段淹没的历史,一段不为人知的故事,一个神与人的传奇,到底成人,还是成神,只在一念之间。
  • 一生玺爱:娘子一点也不乖

    一生玺爱:娘子一点也不乖

    一朝穿越,竟发现自己身在妓院。洛叶委屈,小说里穿越不都是当皇后、当王妃,为什么自己是妓女!太不公平了!不过她却过的风声水起。兵来将挡,水来土掩,那些客官一一被她制服,可他却无能为力。“客官,来,先喝口茶解解渴。”她在里面下了泻药。“我不渴。”“客官我给你捏捏肩。”她在手指上抹了软骨散。“我不累。”“客官我伺候你休息吧。”她在床上放了自动锁拷。“我没心思。”洛叶掀桌,“那你来妓院做什么!”他抬眸,认真地看着洛叶,说:“我来妓院娶你回家。”
  • 龙浮屠

    龙浮屠

    画虎屠龙叹旧图,血书才了凤眼枯。迄今十丈鄱湖水,流尽当年泪点无。一桩灭门惨案,却迷雾重重。引出百年江湖武林纷争,沈誉君为惨案幸存者,却又成为自家惨案的凶手。亦正亦邪之间,到底如何应对?两大神器百年传承,肩负如何使命?神器执掌者为两代宿敌,却又怎生掌控武林纠纷?当天下大义当前,区区身后之名、个人荣辱、独善其身纷纷置于脑后,《龙浮屠》中,有老而不衰的隐士高人,有初出茅庐的少年英雄,有忍辱负重的无名英雄。正所谓:若正义将欲灭我,我愿为正义而亡!
  • 我们的幸运符号

    我们的幸运符号

    十年之约,十年的约定十年演唱会,十年的青春沐梓涵是王源的同学,沐梓陌是沐梓涵的妹妹,因tfboys的经纪人请他们去帮忙作词姐姐一起作词,就成了小小的“作词家”慢慢的因为公司发现她很有潜力就让她们俩出道,开始是公司为他们创歌,接着就是慢慢的发挥,慢慢的唱原创歌曲,她们和TF一起去领奖,一起训练,一起玩……