登陆注册
15489500000053

第53章 STORY THE SEVENTH: Dick Danvers presents his Petit

"Why should it?" Tommy answered his searching gaze with a slightly puzzled look. "Of course, I'm sorry. He was becoming useful. But we couldn't expect him to stop with us always, could we?"

Peter, rubbing his hands, broke into a chuckle. "I told him 'twas all fiddlesticks. Clodd, he would have it you were growing to care for the fellow."

"For Dick Danvers?" Tommy laughed. "Whatever put that into his head?"

"Oh, well, there were one or two little things that we had noticed."

"We?"

"I mean that Clodd had noticed."

I'm glad it was Clodd that noticed them, not you, dad, thought Tommy to herself. They'd have been pretty obvious if you had noticed them.

"It naturally made me anxious," confessed Peter. "You see, we know absolutely nothing of the fellow."

"Absolutely nothing," agreed Tommy.

"He may be a man of the highest integrity. Personally, I think he is. I like him. On the other hand, he may be a thorough-paced scoundrel. I don't believe for a moment that he is, but he may be.

Impossible to say."

"Quite impossible," agreed Tommy.

"Considered merely as a journalist, it doesn't matter. He writes well. He has brains. There's an end of it."

"He is very painstaking," agreed Tommy.

"Personally," added Peter, "I like the fellow." Tommy had returned to her work.

Of what use was Peter in a crisis of this kind? Peter couldn't scold. Peter couldn't bully. The only person to talk to Tommy as Tommy knew she needed to be talked to was one Jane, a young woman of dignity with sense of the proprieties.

"I do hope that at least you are feeling ashamed of yourself," remarked Jane to Tommy that same night, as the twain sat together in their little bedroom.

"Done nothing to be ashamed of," growled Tommy.

"Making a fool of yourself openly, for everybody to notice."

"Clodd ain't everybody. He's got eyes at the back of his head.

Sees things before they happen."

"Where's your woman's pride: falling in love with a man who has never spoken to you, except in terms of the most ordinary courtesy."

"I'm not in love with him."

"A man about whom you know absolutely nothing."

"Not in love with him."

"Where does he come from? Who is he?"

"I don't know, don't care; nothing to do with me."

"Just because of his soft eyes, and his wheedling voice, and that half-caressing, half-devotional manner of his. Do you imagine he keeps it specially for you? I gave you credit for more sense."

"I'm not in love with him, I tell you. He's down on his luck, and I'm sorry for him, that's all."

"And if he is, whose fault was it, do you think?"

"It doesn't matter. We are none of us saints. He's trying to pull himself together, and I respect him for it. It's our duty to be charitable and kind to one another in this world!"

"Oh, well, I'll tell you how you can be kind to him: by pointing out to him that he is wasting his time. With his talents, now that he knows his business, he could be on the staff of some big paper, earning a good income. Put it nicely to him, but be firm. Insist on his going. That will be showing true kindness to him--and to yourself, too, I'm thinking, my dear."

And Tommy understood and appreciated the sound good sense underlying Jane's advice, and the very next day but one, seizing the first opportunity, acted upon it; and all would have gone as contemplated if only Dick Danvers had sat still and listened, as it had been arranged in Tommy's programme that he should.

"But I don't want to go," said Dick.

"But you ought to want to go. Staying here with us you are doing yourself no good."

He rose and came to where she stood with one foot upon the fender, looking down into the fire. His doing this disconcerted her. So long as he remained seated at the other end of the room, she was the sub-editor, counselling the staff for its own good. Now that she could not raise her eyes without encountering his, she felt painfully conscious of being nothing more important than a little woman who was trembling.

"It is doing me all the good in the world," he told her, "being near to you."

"Oh, please do sit down again," she urged him. "I can talk to you so much better when you're sitting down."

But he would not do anything he should have done that day. Instead he took her hands in his, and would not let them go; and the reason and the will went out of her, leaving her helpless.

"Let me be with you always," he pleaded. "It means the difference between light and darkness to me. You have done so much for me.

Will you not finish your work? Will you not trust me? It is no hot passion that can pass away, my love for you. It springs from all that is best in me--from the part of me that is wholesome and joyous and strong, the part of me that belongs to you."

Releasing her, he turned away.

"The other part of me--the blackguard--it is dead, dear,--dead and buried. I did not know I was a blackguard, I thought myself a fine fellow, till one day it came home to me. Suddenly I saw myself as I really was. And the sight of the thing frightened me and I ran away from it. I said to myself I would begin life afresh, in a new country, free of every tie that could bind me to the past. It would mean poverty--privation, maybe, in the beginning. What of that? The struggle would brace me. It would be good sport. Ah, well, you can guess the result: the awakening to the cold facts, the reaction of feeling. In what way was I worse than other men?

Who was I, to play the prig in a world where others were laughing and dining? I had tramped your city till my boots were worn into holes. I had but to abandon my quixotic ideals--return to where shame lay waiting for me, to be welcomed with the fatted calf. It would have ended so had I not chanced to pass by your door that afternoon and hear you strumming on the piano."

So Billy was right, after all, thought Tommy to herself, the piano does help.

"It was so incongruous--a piano in Crane Court--I looked to see where the noise came from. I read the name of the paper on the doorpost. 'It will be my last chance,' I said to myself. 'This shall decide it.'"

同类推荐
  • REZANOV

    REZANOV

    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。
  • Censorship and Art

    Censorship and Art

    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。
  • 瘳忘编

    瘳忘编

    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。
  • 峡中行

    峡中行

    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。
  • PHAEDRA

    PHAEDRA

    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
  • 洛特时代之龙骑兵

    洛特时代之龙骑兵

    一个隐藏着秘密的项坠,一个陷入黑暗的王国,来自神族的青睐与垂怜,来自隐秘龙族女王的爱恋。究竟是乱世造英雄还是英雄起乱世,他该何去何从。。
  • 乖听话之一心只为TA

    乖听话之一心只为TA

    蓝枫高校里有一对姐弟,他们时不时搞事情出来,同年级里有2位和姐姐是女闺蜜,有位高大帅哥是弟弟的生死兄弟,而这一位铁哥们却又了不一样身份地位,而那对姐弟的身份也扑朔迷离……一场青春校园的爱情故事就这样拉开帷幕……
  • 苔凉十三月

    苔凉十三月

    小麻雀暗恋上校草千辛万苦,青涩的情感,一心追逐着前方却不知身边有一位正在默默守护,时光荏苒,后来回忆起从前,是那时候的黄昏和操场。
  • 发现陕西:秦始皇陵兵马俑

    发现陕西:秦始皇陵兵马俑

    本书以翔实的资料和丰富的内容介绍了秦始皇陵和“世界第八大奇迹”兵马俑,详细阐述了秦始皇陵和兵马俑一、二、三号陪葬坑的布局特点及剑、矛、戈、戟、弩等出土青铜兵器。精美的图片、精确的考古数据及小资料充实了本书内容,可作为知识的补充,也充分展现了秦代的冶炼技术、工匠的细腻手法和出土文物的艺术价值。
  • 决策问题管理系统开发研究

    决策问题管理系统开发研究

    本书系统评述了决策支持系统的问题管理方法及问题系统的研究现状,通过分析决策问题的普遍特征,在综合人与计算机对决策问题处理的各自优势的基础上,探讨更具智能性的决策问题管理和分析的一般方法。
  • 阿拉德秘史

    阿拉德秘史

    本书已在原创阅读网签约,本站不再更新,有兴趣的朋友可以去原创阅读网搜索DNF之混沌纪元,改名字了哦
  • 那个约定

    那个约定

    偶然的一次帮助,让他们两个,对自己,对对方,对爱情有了新的认识。但每一次相爱都不可能只是一句“我爱你”就可以在一起,爱情是最遥远的,也是最近的距离。在这条路上,他们相遇,那他们又会产生怎样的故事呢?
  • TFBOYS安之若素

    TFBOYS安之若素

    『半透明的奶茶』她曾经是响彻音乐界的天才少女,虽为天才,却只是一个努力的女孩。她如樱花般纯洁,会积极的面对生活。她说过:娱乐圈的人虽然耀眼,却也只是普通人,就像安浅被称为天才,也只是个渴望父爱的小女孩。她为安浅,只为博得你浅浅一笑。
  • 青蛙的星空

    青蛙的星空

    这是一部未来挑战,暴力,种马,血腥与爱情,这些你在这里都找不到。
  • 殷商传奇之妲己传

    殷商传奇之妲己传

    我愿倾尽所有,换你此生安宁。你要记住这个世界只有神不会犯错,只有神永远都是对的。我不信命,为何要这样逼我。身为一个帝王,难道就该放弃所有的欲望吗,我是人不是神。不过是两个孤独的人为伴罢了,这样都不可以。