登陆注册
15477100000054

第54章 XVIII(1)

"BUT I can't think," said Ellie Vanderlyn earnestly, "why you don't announce your engagement before waiting for your divorce.

People are beginning to do it, I assure you--it's so much safer!"

Mrs. Vanderlyn, on the way back from St. Moritz to England, had paused in Paris to renew the depleted wardrobe which, only two months earlier, had filled so many trunks to bursting. Other ladies, flocking there from all points of the globe for the same purpose, disputed with her the Louis XVI suites of the Nouveau Luxe, the pink-candled tables in the restaurant, the hours for trying-on at the dressmakers'; and just because they were so many, and all feverishly fighting to get the same things at the same time, they were all excited, happy and at ease. It was the most momentous period of the year: the height of the "dress makers' season."

Mrs. Vanderlyn had run across Susy Lansing at one of the Rue de la Paix openings, where rows of ladies wan with heat and emotion sat for hours in rapt attention while spectral apparitions in incredible raiment tottered endlessly past them on aching feet.

Distracted from the regal splendours of a chinchilla cloak by the sense that another lady was also examining it, Mrs.

Vanderlyn turned in surprise at sight of Susy, whose head was critically bent above the fur.

"Susy! I'd no idea you were here! I saw in the papers that you were with the Gillows." The customary embraces followed; then Mrs. Vanderlyn, her eyes pursuing the matchless cloak as it disappeared down a vista of receding mannequins, interrogated sharply: "Are you shopping for Ursula? If you mean to order that cloak for her I'd rather know."

Susy smiled, and paused a moment before answering. During the pause she took in all the exquisite details of Ellie Vanderlyn's perpetually youthful person, from the plumed crown of her head to the perfect arch of her patent-leather shoes. At last she said quietly: "No--to-day I'm shopping for myself."

"Yourself? Yourself?" Mrs. Vanderlyn echoed with a stare of incredulity.

"Yes; just for a change," Susy serenely acknowledged.

"But the cloak--I meant the chinchilla cloak ... the one with the ermine lining ...."

"Yes; it is awfully good, isn't it? But I mean to look elsewhere before I decide."

Ah, how often she had heard her friends use that phrase; and how amusing it was, now, to see Ellie's amazement as she heard it tossed off in her own tone of contemptuous satiety! Susy was becoming more and more dependent on such diversions; without them her days, crowded as they were, would nevertheless have dragged by heavily. But it still amused her to go to the big dressmakers', watch the mannequins sweep by, and be seen by her friends superciliously examining all the most expensive dresses in the procession. She knew the rumour was abroad that she and Nick were to be divorced, and that Lord Altringham was "devoted" to her. She neither confirmed nor denied the report: she just let herself be luxuriously carried forward on its easy tide.

But although it was now three months since Nick had left the Palazzo Vanderlyn she had not yet written to him-nor he to her.

Meanwhile, in spite of all that she packed into them, the days passed more and more slowly, and the excitements she had counted on no longer excited her. Strefford was hers: she knew that he would marry her as soon as she was free. They had been together at Ruan for ten days, and after that she had motored south with him, stopping on the way to see Altringham, from which, at the moment, his mourning relatives were absent.

At Altringham they had parted; and after one or two more visits in England she had come back to Paris, where he was now about to join her. After her few hours at Altringham she had understood that he would wait for her as long as was necessary: the fear of the "other women" had ceased to trouble her. But, perhaps for that very reason, the future seemed less exciting than she had expected. Sometimes she thought it was the sight of that great house which had overwhelmed her: it was too vast, too venerable, too like a huge monument built of ancient territorial traditions and obligations. Perhaps it had been lived in for too long by too many serious-minded and conscientious women: somehow she could not picture it invaded by bridge and debts and adultery. And yet that was what would have to be, of course ... she could hardly picture either Strefford or herself continuing there the life of heavy county responsibilities, dull parties, laborious duties, weekly church-going, and presiding over local committees .... What a pity they couldn't sell it and have a little house on the Thames!

Nevertheless she was not sorry to let it be known that Altringham was hers when she chose to take it. At times she wondered whether Nick knew ... whether rumours had reached him.

If they had, he had only his own letter to thank for it. He had told her what course to pursue; and she was pursuing it.

For a moment the meeting with Ellie Vanderlyn had been a shock to her; she had hoped never to see Ellie again. But now that they were actually face to face Susy perceived how dulled her sensibilities were. In a few moments she had grown used to Ellie, as she was growing used to everybody and to everything in the old life she had returned to. What was the use of making such a fuss about things? She and Mrs. Vanderlyn left the dress-maker's together, and after an absorbing session at a new milliner's were now taking tea in Ellie's drawing-room at the Nouveau Luxe.

Ellie, with her spoiled child's persistency, had come back to the question of the chinchilla cloak. It was the only one she had seen that she fancied in the very least, and as she hadn't a decent fur garment left to her name she was naturally in somewhat of a hurry ... but, of course, if Susy had been choosing that model for a friend ....

同类推荐
  • 灵宝毕法

    灵宝毕法

    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。
  • 龙源介清禅师语录

    龙源介清禅师语录

    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。
  • On the Soul

    On the Soul

    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。
  • 历代名贤确论

    历代名贤确论

    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。
  • 平濠记

    平濠记

    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
  • 甜蜜琴之城

    甜蜜琴之城

    情深深,雨朦朦!心城目,雪纷飞!雪桥间,定情深!“喂,那个女的我喜欢你!”“o,是吗?对不起,你的爱车被我砸了!你的女人被我打了!”-=????(°?°)?
  • 灵魂踪迹

    灵魂踪迹

    远古的文明去了哪里?灵魂的踪迹又是什么?这一切是单方的阴谋,还是双方的博弈。且看主人公齐宇,在末法的当今,如何一步步的走上天意铺垫好的道路上,去终结,这最后的年代。
  • 猎狼

    猎狼

    当小绵羊入了军营,当小绵羊遇上大魔狼,当一个书生为了复仇考入特种部队……激情四溢的温馨军旅生活就此展开。人生必不可少的历练,让你体会不一样的友情!想想你的亲妈妈,想想你的好姑娘,走进军营来,还她们一个可靠的胸膛!你没当过兵,你都不知道男人是什么样的!少年,你不来一发吗?原装正版橄榄绿,你值得拥有!
  • 大明宫之盛世悲歌A

    大明宫之盛世悲歌A

    这本小说讲的是初唐与盛唐交替时,发生的故事。自神龙革命后,一代女皇武则天被迫退位,传帝位给三子李显。由此武周倒台,李唐复归。但是,李显登上帝位以后,李唐朝廷内部各种政治势力暗流涌动,各色政治人物粉墨登场,李唐政局动荡不安。本书正是以在这种动荡不安的政局之下,先后发生的唐隆政变和先天政变为历史背景。描绘了在这两次政变发生前后,那些政治人物的内心世界。通过这些政治人物最终的命运结局,试图解读出困扰中国历史在“一治一乱”中交相更替的根本原因。本书在构思上是以真实的历史人物李隆基为主线,另外虚构了三个主要人物李鉴、刘江玉、林妍儿。
  • 外向型企业竞争力研究:基于国际贸易视角

    外向型企业竞争力研究:基于国际贸易视角

    本书内容包括:外向型企业竞争力的理论研究、外向型企业竞争力的评估模型构建、提高外向型企业竞争力的经营策略。
  • 一世倾城:异眼王妃

    一世倾城:异眼王妃

    她乃天生异眼,伤人与无形,视人与透明,又是纯阴女子,血属冷,脉属冰。他乃纯阳刚烈男子,身体燃焰,灼人与千里之外,因为母亲在宫斗中意外牺牲,只得装瘸,只为蛰伏,隐忍着,待报仇的那一刻。她与他有着异眼之缘,他为复仇而生,她却成了他利用的尖刀。
  • 卢修斯

    卢修斯

    有人曾经问我:“你为什么愿意忍受上千年的孤独?”“为了回去找她。”我说道。`“那你会死吗?”“会的,很久以后,或者很久之前。”
  • 斗异魎神

    斗异魎神

    异斗大陆的上古时期有七位魉神,其中一位契约魉神在死之前用他最后一丝的契约之力立下约定——要将自己的力量和斗灵遗传给他的转世者,并把自己的遗愿传达他的潜意识......杨契就是他的遗传者,他为了完成潜意识里的遗愿而来到央夜学院......
  • 武霸七界

    武霸七界

    他生于墓中,被将军收养。有传言他是龙神转世,将来要拯救天下。但他却步步有难,方出生便被鬼怪所缠,长大后被奸人陷害,他甚至不能拯救自己的父母与心爱之人。修仙,是逆天改命的唯一机会。当他大道有成,下得仙山,却发现天不再是原来的天,而命还是原来的命。他不是与天斗,而是与妖斗与魔斗,他自己就是天。
  • 寻仙之路

    寻仙之路

    一个籍籍无名的小子,穿越到一个古代世界,因机缘走上修仙之路。一块前世遗留下来的玉佩,竟然具有疗伤的功用,变强,不是不可能。他要把欺负他的人,踩在脚下!