登陆注册
15489500000050

第50章 STORY THE SEVENTH: Dick Danvers presents his Petit

"I think," said Peter, "it sounded like-- It wasn't 'Home, Sweet Home,' was it?"

Tommy clapped her hands. "Yes, it was. You'll end by liking it yourself, dad. We'll have musical 'At Homes.'"

"Tommy, have I brought you up properly, do you think?"

"No dad, you haven't. You have let me have my own way too much.

You know the proverb: 'Good mothers make bad daughters.' Clodd's right; you've spoilt me, dad. Do you remember, dad, when I first came to you, seven years ago, a ragged little brat out of the streets, that didn't know itself whether 'twas a boy or a girl? Do you know what I thought to myself the moment I set eyes on you?

'Here's a soft old juggins; I'll be all right if I can get in here!' It makes you smart, knocking about in the gutters and being knocked about; you read faces quickly."

"Do you remember your cooking, Tommy? You 'had an aptitude for it,' according to your own idea."

Tommy laughed. "I wonder how you stood it."

"You were so obstinate. You came to me as 'cook and housekeeper,' and as cook and housekeeper, and as nothing else, would you remain.

If I suggested any change, up would go your chin into the air. I dared not even dine out too often, you were such a little tyrant.

The only thing you were always ready to do, if I wasn't satisfied, was to march out of the house and leave me. Wherever did you get that savage independence of yours?"

"I don't know. I think it must have been from a woman--perhaps she was my mother; I don't know--who used to sit up in the bed and cough, all night it seemed to me. People would come to see us--ladies in fine clothes, and gentlemen with oily hair. I think they wanted to help us. Many of them had kind voices. But always a hard look would come into her face, and she would tell them what even then I knew to be untrue--it was one of the first things I can recollect--that we had everything we wanted, that we needed no help from anyone. They would go away, shrugging their shoulders. I grew up with the feeling that seemed to have been burnt into my brain, that to take from anybody anything you had not earned was shameful. I don't think I could do it even now, not even from you.

I am useful to you, dad--I do help you?"

There had crept a terror into Tommy's voice. Peter felt the little hands upon his arm trembling.

"Help me? Why, you work like a nigger--like a nigger is supposed to work, but doesn't. No one--whatever we paid him--would do half as much. I don't want to make your head more swollen than it is, young woman, but you have talent; I am not sure it is not genius."

Peter felt the little hands tighten upon his arm.

"I do want this paper to be a success; that is why I strum upon the piano to please Clodd. Is it humbug?"

"I am afraid it is; but humbug is the sweet oil that helps this whirling world of ours to spin round smoothly. Too much of it cloys: we drop it very gently."

"But you are sure it is only humbug, Tommy?" It was Peter's voice into which fear had entered now. "It is not that you think he understands you better than I do--would do more for you?"

"You want me to tell you all I think of you, and that isn't good for you, dad--not too often. It would be you who would have swelled head then."

"I am jealous, Tommy, jealous of everyone that comes near you.

Life is a tragedy for us old folks. We know there must come a day when you will leave the nest, leave us voiceless, ridiculous, flitting among bare branches. You will understand later, when you have children of your own. This foolish talk about a husband! It is worse for a man than it is for the woman. The mother lives again in her child: the man is robbed of all."

"Dad, do you know how old I am?--that you are talking terrible nonsense?"

"He will come, little girl."

"Yes," answered Tommy, "I suppose he will; but not for a long while--oh, not for a very long while. Don't. It frightens me."

"You? Why should it frighten you?"

"The pain. It makes me feel a coward. I want it to come; I want to taste life, to drain the whole cup, to understand, to feel. But that is the boy in me. I am more than half a boy, I always have been. But the woman in me: it shrinks from the ordeal."

"You talk, Tommy, as if love were something terrible."

"There are all things in it; I feel it, dad. It is life in a single draught. It frightens me."

The child was standing with her face hidden behind her hands. Old Peter, always very bad at lying, stood silent, not knowing what consolation to concoct. The shadow passed, and Tommy's laughing eyes looked out again.

"Haven't you anything to do, dad--outside, I mean?"

"You want to get rid of me?"

"Well, I've nothing else to occupy me till the proofs come in. I'm going to practise, hard."

"I think I'll turn over my article on the Embankment," said Peter.

"There's one thing you all of you ought to be grateful to me for," laughed Tommy, as she seated herself at the piano. "I do induce you all to take more fresh air than otherwise you would."

Tommy, left alone, set herself to her task with the energy and thoroughness that were characteristic of her. Struggling with complicated scales, Tommy bent her eyes closer and closer over the pages of Czerny's Exercises. Glancing up to turn a page, Tommy, to her surprise, met the eyes of a stranger. They were brown eyes, their expression sympathetic. Below them, looking golden with the sunlight falling on it, was a moustache and beard cut short in Vandyke fashion, not altogether hiding a pleasant mouth, about the corners of which lurked a smile.

"I beg your pardon," said the stranger. "I knocked three times.

Perhaps you did not hear me?"

"No, I didn't," confessed Tommy, closing the book of Czerny's Exercises, and rising with chin at an angle that, to anyone acquainted with the chart of Tommy's temperament, might have suggested the advisability of seeking shelter.

"This is the editorial office of Good Humour, is it not?" inquired the stranger.

"It is."

"Is the editor in?"

"The editor is out."

"The sub-editor?" suggested the stranger.

"I am the sub-editor."

The stranger raised his eyebrows. Tommy, on the contrary, lowered hers.

同类推荐
  • 公孙龙子注

    公孙龙子注

    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。
  • 太上导引三光宝真妙经

    太上导引三光宝真妙经

    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。
  • 三才定位图

    三才定位图

    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。
  • 平滇始末

    平滇始末

    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。
  • 证治准绳·女科

    证治准绳·女科

    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
  • 嫡女弃后

    嫡女弃后

    前世的她,倾尽家族之力,助夫君争夺天下,曾经的京城双姝,她以为自己赢了那个女人。却不料功成名就之时,自己的夫君却和那女人一起铲除她的家族,更将她绑上城楼,让她亲眼看到赶来救她的兄长被万箭穿心。更让她痛不欲生的是,愿倾自己的一切救她的人,却是那个身份尊贵却被她毁了婚,自此踏上劫难的男人。老天怜悯,让她再来一世,这一次,她一定会护住家族,另选明主,将她的痛苦十倍百倍地回报给前世利用她背弃她的人。而那个被她辜负的男人,她就算是耍赖用强,也要嫁他!
  • 地球是个后花园

    地球是个后花园

    天帝之子,重返地球,用那无敌的气运创造不一样的神话,商业,娱乐,网路……都留下了他的足迹,供后人仰望。和他相处过的人都说:“什么事在他的运气面前都要跪”
  • 丧失的存在

    丧失的存在

    也许有一天世界末日,你还记得你自己吗?记得名字吗?
  • 善未至

    善未至

    讲述为主,回忆辅助,第一人称的视角带你进入90年代我们那个时段折腾的青春。
  • 女配之莲花系统

    女配之莲花系统

    我操!劳资只是走路而已……怎么突然心脏猝死了?喂!你个莲花!不就是一朵莲花吗?还莲花系统!算了陪你玩吧!本文就是沈晶模仿白莲,走上伪白莲之路!嗯文无能。
  • 行走在阴阳两界的少年

    行走在阴阳两界的少年

    世上本是没有怨灵的,被害死的人多了,也就有了怨灵。。。一个是野门的灵童,一个是阴阳师豪门世家的天之骄女,因缘巧合相遇,正是少年得意时,皆是锋芒毕露。世家纠纷,野门恩怨,人间冷暖,当然还有阴阳师大赛,。然而,一路走来,跟跟鬼呆的久了,就会愈发觉得,人的可怕......
  • 棋货居

    棋货居

    棋货居是一个故事集,主人公是棋货居老板,老板和他的奇物与有缘人发生的一系列故事。每个故事都相互独立,又相辅相成,故事有喜有悲,棋货局老板阿安所赠之物皆是和宝贝有缘的人,无关正邪,只看是否有缘,我有故事,你愿意听吗?
  • 语言的突破(智慧生存丛书)

    语言的突破(智慧生存丛书)

    人类出版史上的奇迹,20世纪以来最畅销的励志经典。永远不要奢望让世界来适应你,你对了,世界就对了,影响你的说话方式,让你能表达自己、说服他人、领导团队。
  • 大梦仙途

    大梦仙途

    此生缺憾,老骥伏枥,功名利禄,到头成空。黄粱一梦,魂归乡兮……一事无成的老书生杨舟,大梦一场,重回年少,他会怎样选择,让自己的人生不留缺憾?大梦春秋,梦仙大道,道途茫茫,以身渡之。睡神仙,睡神仙,大梦如真是神仙!
  • 混在广州

    混在广州

    广州是一个怎么样的都市?繁华吗?它也有落后的一面!消费高吗?它也有低消费的区域!有钱人多吗?在任何地方,贫富差距永远都存在,有富人的地方,肯定有贫者来陪衬。赚钱容易吗?生意的事,有人赚,有人赔,是很正常的。广州,汇聚了千百年文化遗迹,它从南蛮变成一个现代化大都市,但它也像其他城市一样有着种种矛盾。如果没有千百种人在广州生活,那么广州只是一个抽象化的城市名。且看在广州当中的人们,有着怎么样与众不同的人生。