登陆注册
15698000000011

第11章

"I had intended to leave for Sacramento to-morrow night," said Paul, glancing curiously at the helpless man; "but I will go there if you wish.""Thank you. It will be better."

There were a few words of further explanation of the papers, and Pendleton placed the packet in his visitor's hands. Paul rose.

Somehow, it appeared to him that the room looked more faded and forgotten than when he entered it, and the figure of the man before him more lonely, helpless, and abandoned. With one of his sympathetic impulses he said:--"I don't like to leave you here alone. Are you sure you can help yourself without George? Can I do anything before I go?""I am quite accustomed to it," said Pendleton, quietly. "It happens once or twice a year, and when I go out--well--I miss more than I do here."He took Paul's proffered hand mechanically, with a slight return of the critical, doubting look he had cast upon him when he entered.

his voice, too, had quite recovered its old dominance, as he said, with half-patronizing conventionality, "You'll have to find your way out alone. Let me know how you have sped at Santa Clara, will you? Good-by."The staircase and passage seemed to have grown shabbier and meaner as Paul, slowly and hesitatingly, descended to the street. At the foot of the stairs he paused irresolutely, and loitered with a vague idea of turning back on some pretense, only that he might relieve himself of the sense of desertion. He had already determined upon making that inquiry into the colonel's personal and pecuniary affairs which he had not dared to offer personally, and had a half-formed plan of testing his own power and popularity in a certain line of relief that at once satisfied his sympathies and ambitions. Nevertheless, after reaching the street, he lingered a moment, when an odd idea of temporizing with his inclinations struck him. At the farther end of the hotel--one of the parasites living on its decayed fortunes--was a small barber's shop. By having his hair trimmed and his clothes brushed he could linger a little longer beneath the same roof with the helpless solitary, and perhaps come to some conclusion. He entered the clean but scantily furnished shop, and threw himself into one of the nearest chairs, hardly noting that there were no other customers, and that a single assistant, stropping a razor behind a glass door, was the only occupant. But there was a familiar note of exaggerated politeness about the voice of this man as he opened the door and came towards the back of the chair with the formula:--"Mo'nin', sah! Shall we hab de pleshure of shavin' or hah-cuttin'

dis mo'nin'?" Paul raised his eyes quickly to the mirror before him. It reflected the black face and grizzled hair of George.

More relieved at finding the old servant still near his master than caring to comprehend the reason, Hathaway said pleasantly, "Well, George, is this the way you look after your family?"The old man started; for an instant his full red lips seemed to become dry and ashen, the whites of his eyes were suffused and staring, as he met Paul's smiling face in the glass. But almost as quickly he recovered himself, and, with a polite but deprecating bow, said,--"For God sake, sah! I admit de sarkumstances is agin me, but de simple fack is dat I'm temper'ly occupyin' de place of an ole frien', sah, who is called round de cornah.""And I'm devilish glad of any fact, George, that gives me a chance of having my hair cut by Colonel Pendleton's right-hand man. So fire away!"The gratified smile which now suddenly overspread the whole of the old man's face, and seemed to quickly stiffen the rugged and wrinkled fingers that had at first trembled in drawing a pair of shears from a ragged pocket, appeared to satisfy Paul's curiosity for the present. But after a few moments' silent snipping, during which he could detect in the mirror some traces of agitation still twitching the negro's face, he said with an air of conviction:--"Look here, George--why don't you regularly use your leisure moments in this trade? You'd make your fortune by your taste and skill at it."For the next half minute the old man's frame shook with silent childlike laughter behind Paul's chair. "Well, Marse Hathaway, yo's an ole frien' o' my massa, and a gemman yo'self, sah, and a senetah, and I do'an mind tellin' yo'--dat's jess what I bin gone done! It makes a little ready money for de ole woman and de chilleren. But de Kernel don' no'. Ah, sah! de Kernel kill me or hisself if he so much as 'spicioned me. De Kernel is high-toned, sah!--bein' a gemman yo'self, yo' understand. He wouldn't heah ob his niggah worken' for two massas--for all he's willen' to lemme go and help myse'f. But, Lord bless yo', sah, dat ain't in de category! De Kernel couldn't get along widout me.""You collect his rents, don't you?" said Paul, quietly.

"Yes, sah."

"Much?"

"Well, no, sah; not so much as fom'ly, sah! Yo' see, de Kernel's prop'ty lies in de ole parts ob de town, where de po' white folks lib, and dey ain't reg'lar. De Kernel dat sof' in his heart, he dare n' press 'em; some of 'em is ole fo'ty-niners, like hisself, sah; and some is Spanish, sah, and dey is sof' too, and ain't no more gumption dan chilleren, and tink it's ole time come ag'in, and dey's in de ole places like afo' de Mexican wah! and dey don' bin payin' noffin'. But we gets along, sah,--we gets along,--not in de prima facie style, sah! mebbe not in de modden way dut de Kernel don't like; but we keeps ourse'f, sah, and has wine fo' our friends. When yo' come again, sah, yo' 'll find de Widder Glencoe on de sideboard.""Has the colonel many friends here?"

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 王子你别拽

    王子你别拽

    国际黑帮少掌门申海成,总是拽拽冰冷的他,却爱上了可爱美丽的她宋佳佳,屡次为她差点丢掉了性命,总是喜欢霸道的叫她:“女人,你是我老婆”另一黑帮的新任掌门人冷莫寒,人如其名一样冷漠的他,总是默默的为她佳佳付出,第一次夺走了佳佳的初吻,还霸道的说:“从今天起,你就是我女人了”林枫全国际被最大的一个杀手组织“暗杀”的少掌们,第一次在酒吧见到佳佳,就被她落寞的身影所牵动,当他知道佳佳竟然是他失散多年的妹妹之后,他选择默默的保护,将那份爱埋在了心里
  • 鬼吟曲

    鬼吟曲

    月寒潺水曲,荒坟鬼吟殇。小的时候我经常会重复地梦见一个诡异的场景:在雪雾飞扬的夜晚,身穿彩衫的无头女子孤零零的坐在石碑前。她的膝盖上依端着自己的头颅,芊细的手指捏着篦子缓缓梳理头颅上披洒的长发。我的视线从她的右侧掠过时,那张埋瘗在长发下的面孔也渐渐地明晰。这时候我看到她那白皙皙的脸上充斥了寂静的苍凉和忧郁,在凄冷幽静的雪雾中我甚至能听到她那喃喃的吟诗声……。
  • 青春战世纪

    青春战世纪

    小荻的沉默,是为了给对方更猛烈的一击,第二云伊的沉默,所有人都知道会出现什么样的后果,丁咛淡淡地笑了,只有她唐人街的同伴明白,她的这种笑有多可怕,东旭学院高中部的音乐社团被阴云笼罩着,面对11月的高校艺术汇演,这三个互不相让的女孩究竟会拉开怎样的序幕?
  • 夏天过后

    夏天过后

    莫芝在父亲去世后收到了一张写有联系方式的神秘字条。与留下字条的人联系后发现,自己卷入了一场珠宝盗窃案。莫芝坚信父亲未曾动过珠宝一分一毫,但是各项证据都指明了莫芝的父亲和珠宝盗窃案有直接关系。为了高清事情的真相,莫芝和那位留下联系方式的女子展开了一场漫长的调查。为什么父亲会拖着病重的身体参与到那场危险的冒险?为什么神秘女子口中的父亲对于自己的评价与父亲平常对自己说的话大相径庭?莫芝发现随着自己一步步的调查,自己越发的不了解自己的父亲。而她对这场冒险也越来越着迷。
  • 棋中界

    棋中界

    一个佛教密宗的小活佛,因为一次意外情况来到异世大陆,无意中发现自己的灵海中存在一个独立于宇宙之外的“棋界”。这个世界是宗法与魔法并存的世界,这里有着和密宗相关的宗法,这个世界似乎和之前生存的世界大相径同,联系却又独立,太极化阴阳,五行衍八卦。看李文峰如何笑傲异世,凭借自己的悟性,从那个空间悟出大道,不管是宗法还是魔法,抑或是炼丹,都逃不了自然之道,大道始于心!
  • 名臣名儒家训

    名臣名儒家训

    本书选取中国历史上70多位著名政治家和62位著名学者有关家规、家范、家诫等家训篇章,做了严谨准确的编著,分为标点、注释、翻译、评析几个环节,有利于读者在了解历史人物,理解中国古代思想学说、古汉语知识、历史知识的同时,在这些耐人寻味、发人深省的家训中取得教育子女的真经。
  • 寻灵者

    寻灵者

    今生因你而寻,因你红名。我之红名,以为杀道。为兄弟,大杀四方,为女人,雄霸天下。
  • 师兄崛起

    师兄崛起

    仙界一宫之主杨少君,惨遭兄弟背叛,身死道消,穿越到地球,夺舍重生,成为一个豪门弃子。自此,杨少君踏上重修大道的征程,斗豪门,泡美妞,赚大钱,玩转都市,潇洒前行。大师兄崛起,所向无敌,蝼蚁们颤抖吧!
  • 玉堂佳偶

    玉堂佳偶

    有道是富贵难得,佳偶难求!可尚书千金覃楠兮,明明身在富贵乡,眼前还放着个前程似锦的玉面将军,她却誓死不嫁,竟然还要抗旨逃婚!结果,一路逃婚,却是越逃越昏!一个又一个谜团迎面扑来。看这个心思单纯,脑筋复杂的尚书小姐,怎样在迷雾中揭开层层阴谋,又怎样在血色浮沉里挽住刻骨真情......
  • 长不大的童话

    长不大的童话

    《长不大的童话》收录了作者近年来创作发表的童话散文诗200余篇。作者继续坚持以“有趣、有益”为创作理念,同时努力实践了“童话中有诗意,诗意中有童话”的美学追求,并将“童话”、“诗歌”这两个概念融合在散文诗创作之中,从而形成了自己独特的风格。