登陆注册
15448800000011

第11章 CHAPTER III(2)

I said: "You gave your family a fair trial also; if you will allow me the use of slang. Your wife told me that never in the whole course of your married life had she known you so bad tempered, so un-Christian like, as you were that month. Then you remember that other saddle, the one with the spring under it."

He said: "You mean 'the Spiral.'"

I said: "I mean the one that jerked you up and down like a Jack-in-the-box; sometimes you came down again in the right place, and sometimes you didn't. I am not referring to these matters merely to recall painful memories, but I want to impress you with the folly of trying experiments at your time of life."

He said. "I wish you wouldn't harp so much on my age. A man at thirty-four--"

"A man at what?"

He said: "If you don't want the thing, don't have it. If your machine runs away with you down a mountain, and you and George get flung through a church roof, don't blame me."

"I cannot promise for George," I said; "a little thing will sometimes irritate him, as you know. If such an accident as you suggest happen, he may be cross, but I will undertake to explain to him that it was not your fault."

"Is the thing all right?" he asked.

"The tandem," I replied, "is well."

He said: "Have you overhauled it?"

I said: "I have not, nor is anyone else going to overhaul it. The thing is now in working order, and it is going to remain in working order till we start."

I have had experience of this "overhauling." There was a man at Folkestone; I used to meet him on the Lees. He proposed one evening we should go for a long bicycle ride together on the following day, and I agreed. I got up early, for me; I made an effort, and was pleased with myself. He came half an hour late: I was waiting for him in the garden. It was a lovely day. He said:-"That's a good-looking machine of yours. How does it run?"

"Oh, like most of them!" I answered; "easily enough in the morning; goes a little stiffly after lunch."

He caught hold of it by the front wheel and the fork and shook it violently.

I said: "Don't do that; you'll hurt it."

I did not see why he should shake it; it had not done anything to him. Besides, if it wanted shaking, I was the proper person to shake it. I felt much as I should had he started whacking my dog.

He said: "This front wheel wobbles."

I said: "It doesn't if you don't wobble it." It didn't wobble, as a matter of fact--nothing worth calling a wobble.

He said: "This is dangerous; have you got a screw-hammer?"

I ought to have been firm, but I thought that perhaps he really did know something about the business. I went to the tool shed to see what I could find. When I came back he was sitting on the ground with the front wheel between his legs. He was playing with it, twiddling it round between his fingers; the remnant of the machine was lying on the gravel path beside him.

He said: "Something has happened to this front wheel of yours."

"It looks like it, doesn't it?" I answered. But he was the sort of man that never understands satire.

He said: "It looks to me as if the bearings were all wrong."

I said: "Don't you trouble about it any more; you will make yourself tired. Let us put it back and get off."

He said: "We may as well see what is the matter with it, now it is out." He talked as though it had dropped out by accident.

Before I could stop him he had unscrewed something somewhere, and out rolled all over the path some dozen or so little balls.

"Catch 'em!" he shouted; "catch 'em! We mustn't lose any of them."

He was quite excited about them.

We grovelled round for half an hour, and found sixteen. He said he hoped we had got them all, because, if not, it would make a serious difference to the machine. He said there was nothing you should be more careful about in taking a bicycle to pieces than seeing you did not lose any of the balls. He explained that you ought to count them as you took them out, and see that exactly the same number went back in each place. I promised, if ever I took a bicycle to pieces I would remember his advice.

I put the balls for safety in my hat, and I put my hat upon the doorstep. It was not a sensible thing to do, I admit. As a matter of fact, it was a silly thing to do. I am not as a rule addle-headed; his influence must have affected me.

He then said that while he was about it he would see to the chain for me, and at once began taking off the gear-case. I did try to persuade him from that. I told him what an experienced friend of mine once said to me solemnly:-"If anything goes wrong with your gear-case, sell the machine and buy a new one; it comes cheaper."

He said: "People talk like that who understand nothing about machines. Nothing is easier than taking off a gear-case."

I had to confess he was right. In less than five minutes he had the gear-case in two pieces, lying on the path, and was grovelling for screws. He said it was always a mystery to him the way screws disappeared.

We were still looking for the screws when Ethelbertha came out.

She seemed surprised to find us there; she said she thought we had started hours ago.

He said: "We shan't be long now. I'm just helping your husband to overhaul this machine of his. It's a good machine; but they all want going over occasionally."

Ethelbertha said: "If you want to wash yourselves when you have done you might go into the back kitchen, if you don't mind; the girls have just finished the bedrooms."

She told me that if she met Kate they would probably go for a sail; but that in any case she would be back to lunch. I would have given a sovereign to be going with her. I was getting heartily sick of standing about watching this fool breaking up my bicycle.

Common sense continued to whisper to me: "Stop him, before he does any more mischief. You have a right to protect your own property from the ravages of a lunatic. Take him by the scruff of the neck, and kick him out of the gate!"

But I am weak when it comes to hurting other people's feelings, and I let him muddle on.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 你追我赶:小小医女求放过

    你追我赶:小小医女求放过

    她只想与世无争,平淡一生。但一次又一次的阴谋却把她的一生变得不再平静,将她拉入官场.江湖的纷争当中无法抽身。他站在云峰之中,却只想护她一生。可是人性险恶,一次又一次的风波却害了他最爱的那个她,使他离她越来越远。她与他的遏后是福还是祸?两个人的爱恋如何发展?两人的结局如何……(吐槽加小说的QQ群:472652974,但是记住没事的时候不能调戏竹竹)..
  • 赤狐殇

    赤狐殇

    “阿姐,你说眼泪是什么味道?”“阿姐,原来真是苦的。”“阿姐,他们杀了你一人,我便要他们全城人的命!!”“如果,有来生。我希望我再也不会遇见你。”“我涂羽虽然为妖,但是我没有伤过任何人。”“玉清跟我走,我们远离尘世去赤山生活吧。”“冥渊,你以为你伤了我一次,我会让你再伤第二次吗!!”绝对专情,绝对虐恋,绝对欢喜结局!!!一对一的爱恋!!人妖恋,神妖恋。
  • 玩毒王妃:九岁小恶魔

    玩毒王妃:九岁小恶魔

    当年,宫小小九岁,不就是看上御花园一盆雪牡丹么?结果倒霉地被小气王爷抓辫子。她只是‘不小心’把他踢下湖而已,这下子好了,踢出小王妃的名号来。这这……这不是逼良为娼吗?没办法,这年头,权势是王道,小王妃就小王妃。有人能封妃,自然有人能休妻。休妻?小王爷满脸乌云,阴测测。不休!小王妃甜蜜蜜点头,不休妻就不休妻,她可以休夫嘛。第二天,漫天休书贴满皇城大小角落。恶魔小王妃,一纸休书,休了小王爷。屁股拍拍,衣袖挥挥,不带一丝云彩,潇洒离开。顿时,小王爷沦为满城笑话之最。跑?看你往哪跑?小王爷咬牙切齿,这该死的野丫头。害得他丢尽脸面,不教训她,他就是王八!追逐,是谁追逐谁的脚步;遗失,是谁遗失谁的爱情。
  • 易烊千玺我只爱你

    易烊千玺我只爱你

    本书已弃文,谢谢曾经的观看与支持,想知道详情的请看最后一章。
  • 守护甜心之爱的守护

    守护甜心之爱的守护

    爱恨只在转瞬之间,能否把握就在你的一念之间,你若不离,我定不弃!你若放弃,你我缘分到此为止,你若坚持,我定陪你白头到老,永不分离
  • 边王爷的天才妖孽妃

    边王爷的天才妖孽妃

    她是人人唾弃的外姓废材郡主,传闻她奇丑无比,无一是处,是枫岚之耻;他是人人尊崇的战神七王爷,传闻他骁勇善战,不败战神,是澜启之荣;后来,她的国家为求和,把她远嫁澜启与他联姻,而他却毁了她的国家……
  • 红莲骑士之缔造

    红莲骑士之缔造

    烈焰在天际燃烧,绽放出生命的色彩,璀璨的红色莲花在最后的时光中盛开。
  • 三界之灵魂界

    三界之灵魂界

    千年前,三界大乱后归为灵魂界,消失的三界众生无影无踪。地球末日时期,王溟与异界生物至宝白月之论同归于尽,却来到了三界消失后的灵魂界。命运使然还是亦有归宿?生命的耗尽真的是终结亦或是开始?
  • 校外女生

    校外女生

    中午放学,陈佳就匆匆往外走。李梅追上来问:“陈班长你这么着急要干什么去呀?”陈佳说:“昨天晚上我看见离校门口不远有一个店铺要转租,当时,我没带手机,这就没联系上。”“你想干什么?”李梅问。……
  • 梦琉璃之恋

    梦琉璃之恋

    一个平凡的女孩,谢幽芸,在机运巧合之下,进入了梦境。在一个樱花般的季节,一朵美丽的爱情之花悄悄盛开。花蕊之中满载着欢乐,满载着眼泪,满载着痛苦,满载着喜悦。。。。。。一个患有自闭症的男孩,因为她改变了他的一切,又因为另一个她,改变了他的一生。一个女孩,因为他自甘堕落,但却又因为他,做回了真正的自己,善良、可爱。这一切的一切,都源于一个字————爱。一场关于爱的奇幻之旅,将在他与她之间展开。。。。。。