登陆注册
15330600000015

第15章

And just sitting here beside you and putting in these curtain hooks, I want you to know that it's inspiring to me.Yes, it is, inspiring; it's elevating.You don't know how it makes a man feel to have the companionship of a good and lovely woman.""Landry, as though I were all that.Here, put another hook in here."She held the fold towards him.But he took her hand as their fingers touched and raised it to his lips and kissed it.She did not withdraw it, nor rebuke him, crying out instead, as though occupied with quite another matter:

"Landry, careful, my dear boy; you'll make me prick my fingers.Ah--there, you did."He was all commiseration and self-reproach at once, and turned her hand palm upwards, looking for the scratch.

"Um!" she breathed."It hurts."

"Where now," he cried, "where was it? Ah, I was a beast; I'm so ashamed." She indicated a spot on her wrist instead of her fingers, and very naturally Landry kissed it again.

"How foolish!" she remonstrated."The idea! As if Iwasn't old enough to be----"

"You're not so old but what you're going to marry me some day," he declared.

"How perfectly silly, Landry!" she retorted."Aren't you done with my hand yet?""No, indeed," he cried, his clasp tightening over her fingers."It's mine.You can't have it till I say--or till you say that--some day--you'll give it to me for good--for better or for worse.""As if you really meant that," she said, willing to prolong the little situation.It was very sweet to have this clean, fine-fibred young boy so earnestly in love with her, very sweet that the lifting of her finger, the mere tremble of her eyelid should so perturb him.

"Mean it! Mean it!" he vociferated."You don't know how much I do mean it.Why, Laura, why--why, I can't think of anything else.""You!" she mocked."As if I believed that.How many other girls have you said it to this year?"Landry compressed his lips.

"Miss Dearborn, you insult me."

"Oh, my!" exclaimed Laura, at last withdrawing her hand.

"And now you're mocking me.It isn't kind.No, it isn't; it isn't _kind._""I never answered your question yet," she observed.

"What question?"

"About your coming to see me when we were settled.

I _thought_ you wanted to know."

"How about lunch?" said Page, from the doorway."Do you know it's after twelve?""The girl has got something for us," said Laura."Itold her about it.Oh, just a pick-up lunch--coffee, chops.I thought we wouldn't bother to-day.We'll have to eat in the kitchen.""Well, let's be about it," declared Landry, "and finish with these curtains afterward.Inwardly I'm a ravening wolf."It was past one o'clock by the time that luncheon, "picked up" though it was, was over.By then everybody was very tired.Aunt Wess' exclaimed that she could not stand another minute, and retired to her room.

Page, indefatigable, declaring they never would get settled if they let things dawdle along, set to work unpacking her trunk and putting her clothes away.Her fox terrier, whom the family, for obscure reasons, called the Pig, arrived in the middle of the afternoon in a crate, and shivering with the chill of the house, was tied up behind the kitchen range, where, for all the heat, he still trembled and shuddered at long intervals, his head down, his eyes rolled up, bewildered and discountenanced by so much confusion and so many new faces.

Outside the weather continued lamentable.The rain beat down steadily upon the heaps of snow on the grass-plats by the curbstones, melting it, dirtying it, and reducing it to viscid slush.The sky was lead grey;the trees, bare and black as though built of iron and wire, dripped incessantly.The sparrows, huddling under the house-eaves or in interstices of the mouldings, chirped feebly from time to time, sitting disconsolate, their feathers puffed out till their bodies assumed globular shapes.Delivery wagons trundled up and down the street at intervals, the horses and drivers housed in oil-skins.

The neighborhood was quiet.There was no sound of voices in the streets.But occasionally, from far away in the direction of the river or the Lake Front, came the faint sounds of steamer and tug whistles.The sidewalks in either direction were deserted.Only a solitary policeman, his star pinned to he outside of his dripping rubber coat, his helmet shedding rivulets, stood on the corner absorbed in the contemplation of the brown torrent of the gutter plunging into a sewer vent.

Landry and Laura were in the library at the rear of the house, a small room, two sides of which were occupied with book-cases.They were busy putting the books in place.Laura stood half-way up the step-ladder taking volume after volume from Landry as he passed them to her.

"Do you wipe them carefully, Landry?" she asked.

He held a strip of cloth torn from an old sheet in his hand, and rubbed the dust from each book before he handed it to her.

"Yes, yes; very carefully," he assured her."Say," he added, "where are all your modern novels? You've got Scott and Dickens and Thackeray, of course, and Eliot--yes, and here's Hawthorne and Poe.But I haven't struck anything later than Oliver Wendell Holmes."Laura put up her chin."Modern novels--no indeed.

When I've yet to read 'Jane Eyre,' and have only read 'Ivanhoe' and 'The Newcomes' once."She made a point of the fact that her taste was the extreme of conservatism, refusing to acknowledge hardly any fiction that was not almost classic.Even Stevenson aroused her suspicions.

"Well, here's 'The Wrecker,' "observed Landry, handing it up to her."I read it last summer-vacation at Waukesha.Just about took the top of my head off.""I tried to read it," she answered."Such an outlandish story, no love story in it, and so coarse, so brutal, and then so improbable.I couldn't get interested."But abruptly Landry uttered an exclamation:

"Well, what do you call this? 'Wanda,' by Ouida.

How is this for modern?"

She blushed to her hair, snatching the book from him.

"Page brought it home.It's hers."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 神游大地之岩晋

    神游大地之岩晋

    有种错误此生也没能让你有机会重新作出最正确的选择....不知道过去了多久,我终于从这种束缚中解脱出来,我忍住大脑中很想狠狠亲吻她的冲动,迫使自己远离这里,可是就像有了心灵感应,她回味无穷的看着我,用力的抓紧我的脑袋,狠狠的亲吻了我的嘴唇,我有种再次沦陷的冲动........终于她有了反应,手反过来扯住自己的头发,用力地转过头,艰难的望着我发出猫一样但凶狠的叫声,她的嘴里有泰穆身上的碎肉,牙齿像鲨鱼一样成锯齿状暴露在树林的阴影中,她说道........她的心狂跳着,嘴角是满满的幸福,抱着岩晋的手都有种微微颤抖的感觉........
  • 萌菌系统

    萌菌系统

    肖隐死后意外穿越了,没有7系魔法全通,没有神级老师,他有的,是——菌娘系统。肖隐花了许长的时间才明白了这个系统的一丁丁点,总而言之:它能将细菌萌化、娘化,让原本恐怖的各式细菌,成为莺莺燕燕在肖隐身周的萌妹子,协助肖隐战斗……好像很不错的样子,但对光明磊落的肖隐而言,似乎也有不太好啊——决斗时分,让对手因为大肠杆菌娘的调皮而惨白着脸捂着肚子疼痛艰难战斗,还得夹紧X花憋住汹涌的屎意……哥们,这战斗,我肖隐赢定了啊!
  • 幻想之书

    幻想之书

    每一个男孩心中都有一个英雄梦,每一个女孩心中都有一个公主梦。我相信,这个世界上只要我坚信,有些东西有些事就会存在。……这里没有绚丽的魔法没有强大的斗气没有神奇的科技力量,只有一种”只要你幻想,就能实现“的愿法。这是一首关于青春的幻想曲,欢迎品尝。
  • 从前有个道士

    从前有个道士

    从前有个道士,他爱恨分明。从前有个道士,他捉鬼降妖。从前有个道士,他风趣幽默。从前有个道士,他不喜杀戮。从前有个道士,他有时自身难保。从前有个道士,他不是为自己而活。
  • 萌魂时代

    萌魂时代

    我叫司弓,是一名天天向下的学生狗,据说情商是负数,青梅叫我丧男,表姐称我傻·逼,然而这样的我依然坚强的活到了现在。直到那一天,我的生活发生了不可思议的变化……
  • 死无伤

    死无伤

    你真的认识我们这个世界吗?不,你只相信你看到的世界。修仙界自千万年前就已然存在,却自炎黄时期开始凋零,没有人知道其中的原因,只知道,如今的修仙界已经濒临灭亡。五千年的轮回,神之子降临,千年前种下的因,会结出怎样的果?一切尽在《死无伤》。
  • 儒增篇

    儒增篇

    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。
  • 中国式秘书3

    中国式秘书3

    试想,全市那么多官员的升降进退,从推荐、考核、测评到最后的公示、任免,哪一样不需要组织部的操办、介入或过问?人事不像政事那样刻板,而是千变万化,其中很多所涉之人或是身份特殊,或是关系敏感,更加需要这个组织部特别知己贴心。阳城目前的情况,同市委书记廖志国期望的恰恰相反。
  • 易烊千玺:有生之年,狭路相逢

    易烊千玺:有生之年,狭路相逢

    当你知道真正爱上一个人后,你会选择说出口吗?当你真正恋爱的时候,你会选择把一切好的东西都给对方吗?时间硬生生地把我们分离,也好,不会让你留下遗憾。那晚,街边华灯初上,上海的夜景依旧很美,来往的车辆依旧川流不息,唯独她行色匆匆,焦虑而无助。“希望你可以和喜欢的人重逢”感谢支持第一本书《易烊千玺之何所冬暖何所夏凉》
  • 总裁强宠小蛮妻

    总裁强宠小蛮妻

    婚礼上,她去抢婚,却被他狠狠扇了一耳光。她以为,他们的缘分就此结束,谁知道才是噩梦般的开始。他摧毁了她的清白,限制了她的自由,剥夺了她的人生!他给她的,从来只有狠狠的羞辱!“顾霆烨,你要做什么!”“做什么,我要让你这个口是心非的女人知道,你的身体,早就习惯了我的碰触,甚至是期望我能更深层次!”