登陆注册
15515400000032

第32章 CHAPTER VI(4)

Robina told him that she had done talking. She gave him her reasons for having done talking. If talking to him would be of any use she would often have felt it her duty to talk to him, not only with regard to his stupidity and selfishness and general aggravatingness, but with reference to his character as a whole. Her excuse for not talking to him was the crushing conviction of the hopelessness of ever effecting any improvement in him. Were it otherwise - "Seriously speaking," said Dick, now escaped from his corner, "something, I take it, has gone wrong with the stove, and you want a sort of general smith."

He opened the kitchen door and looked in.

"Great Scott!" he said. "What was it--an earthquake?"

I looked in over his shoulder.

"But it could not have been an earthquake," I said. "We should have felt it."

"It is not an earthquake," explained Robina. "It is your youngest daughter's notion of making herself useful."

Robina spoke severely. I felt for the moment as if I had done it all myself. I had an uncle who used to talk like that. "Your aunt," he would say, regarding me with a reproachful eye, "your aunt can be, when she likes, the most trying woman to live with I have ever known." It would depress me for days. I would wonder whether I ought to speak to her about it, or whether I should be doing only harm.

"But how did she do it?" I demanded. "It is impossible that a mere child--where is the child?"

The parlour contained but Robina. I hurried to the door; Dick was already half across the field. Veronica I could not see.

"We are making haste," Dick shouted back, "in case it is early-closing day."

"I want Veronica!" I shouted.

"What?" shouted Dick.

"Veronica!" I shouted with my hands to my mouth.

"Yes!" shouted Dick. "She's on ahead."

It was useless screaming any more. He was now climbing the stile.

"They always take each other's part, those two," sighed Robina.

"Yes, and you are just as bad," I told her; "if he doesn't, you do.

And then if it's you they take your part. And you take his part.

And he takes both your parts. And between you all I am just getting tired of bringing any of you up." (Which is the truth.) "How did this thing happen?"

"I had got everything finished," answered Robina. "The duck was in the oven with the pie; the peas and potatoes were boiling nicely. I was feeling hot, and I thought I could trust Veronica to watch the things for awhile. She promised not to play King Alfred."

"What's that?" I asked.

"You know," said Robina--"King Alfred and the cakes. I left her one afternoon last year when we were on the houseboat to watch some buns.

When I came back she was sitting in front of the fire, wrapped up in the table-cloth, with Dick's banjo on her knees and a cardboard crown upon her head. The buns were all burnt to a cinder. As I told her, if I had known what she wanted to be up to I could have given her some extra bits of dough to make believe with. But oh, no! if you please, that would not have suited her at all. It was their being real buns, and my being real mad, that was the best part of the game.

She is an uncanny child."

"What was the game this time?" I asked.

"I don't think it was intended for a game--not at first," answered Robina. "I went into the wood to pick some flowers for the table. I was on my way back, still at some distance from the house, when I heard quite a loud report. I took it for a gun, and wondered what anyone would be shooting in July. It must be rabbits, I thought.

Rabbits never seem to have any time at all to themselves, poor things. And in consequence I did not hurry myself. It must have been about twenty minutes later when I came in sight of the house.

Veronica was in the garden deep in confabulation with an awful-looking boy, dressed in nothing but rags. His face and hands were almost black. You never saw such an object. They both seemed very excited. Veronica came to meet me; and with a face as serious as mine is now, stood there and told me the most barefaced pack of lies you ever heard. She said that a few minutes after I had gone, robbers had come out of the wood--she talked about them as though there had been hundreds--and had with the most awful threats demanded to be admitted into the house. Why they had not lifted the latch and walked in, she did not explain. It appeared this cottage was their secret rendezvous, where all their treasure lies hidden. Veronica would not let them in, but shouted for help: and immediately this awful-looking boy, to whom she introduced me as 'Sir Robert' something or another, had appeared upon the scene; and then there had followed--well, I have not the patience to tell you the whole of the rigmarole they had concocted. The upshot of it was that the robbers, defeated in their attempt to get into the house, had fired a secret mine, which had exploded in the kitchen. If I did not believe them I could go into the kitchen and see for myself. Say what I would, that is the story they both stuck to. It was not till I had talked to Veronica for a quarter of an hour, and had told her that you would most certainly communicate with the police, and that she would have to convince a judge and jury of the truth of her story, that I got any sense at all out of her."

"What was the sense you did get out of her?" I asked.

"Well, I am not sure even now that it is the truth," said Robina--"the child does not seem to possess a proper conscience. What she will grow up like, if something does not happen to change her, it is awful to think."

"I don't want to appear a hustler," I said, "and maybe I am mistaken in the actual time, but it feels to me like hours since I asked you how the catastrophe really occurred."

"I am telling you," explained Robina, hurt. "She was in the kitchen yesterday when I mentioned to Harry's mother, who had looked in to help me wash up, that the kitchen chimney smoked: and then she said--"

"Who said?" I asked.

"Why, she did," answered Robina, "Harry's mother. She said that very often a pennyworth of gunpowder--"

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 这群道士有点嗨

    这群道士有点嗨

    第三人称的奇幻故事看多了?那就换第一人称的来看看吧!这里有疯狂的道士,牛逼的想法,很嗨的世界观。接下来,让我们进入活的不朽、死的伟大、生时作死、亡时气人的《这群道士有点嗨!》吧!本书因为某些原因,提前半年和大家见面。作者声明:本书所讲的一切均为扯蛋,如有雷同,请一笑置之。故事绝对没有笑点,内容绝对不好看,文笔绝对烂到爆。不是我吹牛,一般的帅男靓女至少都会看到一百章左右。此书是仙侠,是修道,是奇幻,亦是胡扯。
  • 我是炼金术士

    我是炼金术士

    方华偶然得到一本炼金笔记,然后,过上了梦想中的“手艺人”生活!一年里,我只需要做出一件炼金物品出售,就够我潇洒三年的了。。。治疗药剂:有病治病,无病养身。力量药剂:干了这一管,你就是三分钟的霸王。智慧药剂:有了它,妈妈再也不用担心我的学习了。储物戒指:一个字“牛掰”!透视眼镜:这个是干嘛用的,好奇怪啊!隐身斗篷:又是一件奇怪的东西!
  • 新网王之故地重游

    新网王之故地重游

    明明还是个孩子,却总用数不尽的光环和带刺的语言与别人划开界限,掩盖自己的懦弱。
  • 追妻之路:傻子王爷与腹黑女王

    追妻之路:傻子王爷与腹黑女王

    她是一个被神卷顾的一个女孩。她是一个被神遗弃的女孩。俩人分别在其它时空,一场机遇,让两人合二为一……………………。异世:他只是一个不受宠的皇子,为了生存不得不装疯卖傻………………可她遇见了他,开始了一段奇妙的恋情…………
  • 你是氧气

    你是氧气

    一步关于人文诚信的思考,以男主人公许明信的大学校园生活为主线,涉及到许多关于现实生活诚信的宣扬和希望。
  • 你亦是我的命

    你亦是我的命

    主角:EXO鹿晗一个任性傲娇的女孩,一个善良义气的男孩,和一段虐心的异国恋。他那么爱你,一心希望和你永远在一起,你是否能够懂的呢?
  • 金太郎历险记

    金太郎历险记

    本书是“想经典:想象力完全解决方案”丛书中的一本。作者选取了数十篇精彩的日本童话,在景物描写和写作风格上颇具日本风情。内容浅显易懂,生动活泼,适合儿童阅读,富有儿童情趣,融知识性和思想性于娱乐性和趣味性之中。
  • 神奇宝贝之天语星愿

    神奇宝贝之天语星愿

    现在,带上你的神奇宝贝,勇敢的出发吧!向前进!
  • 人族灵侠

    人族灵侠

    广袤无边的萨尔那加大陆上,生存着海量的种族。人类只是这种族之海中的一员,而在人族领地之中,东部边疆要塞---永恒之城之中,生活着一个以乞讨为生的小乞丐,一切都从那件被他捡回家的破烂战甲开始了。
  • 英雄联盟之我的瓦罗兰

    英雄联盟之我的瓦罗兰

    他们都说我是穿着东方盔甲的奇怪人,但我只想顶在最前面,用我的长枪保护我的朋友。————德邦总管我醒来了,但是我什么都不记得。我很害怕,我包裹住我的身体,然后在黑暗中哭泣。————殇之木乃伊我蒙上自己的双眼,只想记住最后看你的那一眼。我刺瞎自己的双眼,只为记住那逝去的红颜。————盲僧这是瓦罗兰,一个爱与战争并存的地方,一个我愿意为之守护一生的地方。