登陆注册
26281600000019

第19章 CHAPTER II(3)

"Yes," said Mrs. Barker, "and I hope your friend Stacy remembered that but for ME, when you found out that you were not rich, you'd have given up the claim, but that I really deceived my own father to make you keep it. I've often worried over that, George," she said pensively, turning a diamond bracelet around her pretty wrist, "although I never said anything about it."

"But, Kitty darling," said Barker, grasping his wife's hand, "I gave my note for it; you know you said that was bargain enough, and I had better wait until the note was due, and until I found I couldn't pay, before I gave up the claim. It was very clever of you, and the boys all said so, too. But you never deceived your father, dear," he said, looking at her gravely, "for I should have told him everything."

"Of course, if you look at it in that way," said his wife languidly, "it's nothing; only I think it ought to be remembered when people go about saying papa ruined you with his hotel schemes."

"Who dares say that?" said Barker indignantly.

"Well, if they don't SAY it they look it," said Mrs. Barker, with a toss of her pretty head, "and I believe that's at the bottom of Stacy's refusal."

"But he never said a word, Kitty," said Barker, flushing.

"There, don't excite yourself, George," said Mrs. Barker resignedly, "but go for the baby. I know you're dying to go, and I suppose it's time Norah brought it upstairs."

At any other time Barker would have lingered with explanations, but just then a deeper sense than usual of some misunderstanding made him anxious to shorten this domestic colloquy. He rose, pressed his wife's hand, and went out. But yet he was not entirely satisfied with himself for leaving her. "I suppose it isn't right my going off as soon as I come in," he murmured reproachfully to himself, "but I think she wants the baby back as much as I; only, womanlike, she didn't care to let me know it."

He reached the lower hall, which he knew was a favorite promenade for the nurses who were gathered at the farther end, where a large window looked upon Montgomery Street. But Norah, the Irish nurse, was not among them; he passed through several corridors in his search, but in vain. At last, worried and a little anxious, he turned to regain his rooms through the long saloon where he had found his wife previously. It was deserted now; the last caller had left--even frivolity had its prescribed limits. He was consequently startled by a gentle murmur from one of the heavily curtained window recesses. It was a woman's voice--low, sweet, caressing, and filled with an almost pathetic tenderness. And it was followed by a distinct gurgling satisfied crow.

Barker turned instantly in that direction. A step brought him to the curtain, where a singular spectacle presented itself.

Seated on a lounge, completely absorbed and possessed by her treasure, was the "horrid woman" whom his wife had indicated only a little while ago, holding a baby--Kitty's sacred baby--in her wanton lap! The child was feebly grasping the end of the slender jeweled necklace which the woman held temptingly dangling from a thin white jeweled finger above it. But its eyes were beaming with an intense delight, as if trying to respond to the deep, concentrated love in the handsome face that was bent above it.

At the sudden intrusion of Barker she looked up. There was a faint rise in her color, but no loss of sell-possession.

"Please don't scold the nurse," she said, "nor say anything to Mrs.

Barker. It is all my fault. I thought that both the nurse and child looked dreadfully bored with each other, and I borrowed the little fellow for a while to try and amuse him. At least I haven't made him cry, have I, dear?" The last epithet, it is needless to say, was addressed to the little creature in her lap, but in its tender modulation it touched the father's quick sympathies as if he had shared it with the child. "You see," she said softly, disengaging the baby fingers from her necklace, "that OUR *** is not the only one tempted by jewelry and glitter."

Barker hesitated; the Madonna-like devotion of a moment ago was gone; it was only the woman of the world who laughingly looked up at him. Nevertheless he was touched. "Have you--ever--had a child, Mrs. Horncastle?" he asked gently and hesitatingly. He had a vague recollection that she passed for a widow, and in his ****** eyes all women were virgins or married saints.

"No," she said abruptly. Then she added with a laugh, "Or perhaps I should not admire them so much. I suppose it's the same feeling bachelors have for other people's wives. But I know you're dying to take that boy from me. Take him, then, and don't be ashamed to carry him yourself just because I'm here; you know you would delight to do it if I weren't."

Barker bent over the silken lap in which the child was comfortably nestling, and in that attitude had a faint consciousness that Mrs.

Horncastle was mischievously breathing into his curls a silent laugh. Barker lifted his firstborn with proud skillfulness, but that sagacious infant evidently knew when he was comfortable, and in a paroxy** of objection caught his father's curls with one fist, while with the other he grasped Mrs. Horncastle's brown braids and brought their heads into contact. Upon which humorous situation Norah, the nurse, entered.

"It's all right, Norah," said Mrs. Horncastle, laughing, as she disengaged herself from the linking child. "Mr. Barker has claimed the baby, and has agreed to forgive you and me and say nothing to Mrs. Barker." Norah, with the inscrutable criticism of her *** on her ***, thought it extremely probable, and halted with exasperating discretion. "There," continued Mrs. Horncastle, playfully evading the child's further advances, "go with papa, that's a dear. Mr. Barker prefers to carry him back, Norah."

"But," said the ingenuous and persistent Barker, still lingering in hopes of recalling the woman's previous expression, "you DO love children, and you think him a bright little chap for his age?"

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 毒手宠妃

    毒手宠妃

    莫名的穿越,变成林府不受宠的嫡长女,不但爹不疼,还有继母在前面迫害,同父异母的妹妹在后面谋害。接踵而来的阴谋,孰可忍,孰不可忍。你敬我一尺,我敬你一丈。别怪我心狠手辣。“什么,想用权势压本小姐,想都别想,我身后还有个高高在上的王爷宠着呢!”
  • 子非佳偶

    子非佳偶

    将门遗孤,世家公子边关的策马长歌,没有磨灭女儿的娇羞柔情朝堂的尔虞我诈,没有铸造君子的勃勃野心军营权谋,京中诡谲也许那一天城墙上你的嫣然一笑,便是我一生的劫
  • 罗斯福大传

    罗斯福大传

    本书详述了罗斯福传奇的一生,剖析了罗斯福的政治风格及政治谋略,给大家呈现一个真实而完整的政治领袖。希望本书能让您更多地了解罗斯福,用罗斯福的智慧、魅力和魄力,去充实自己、鼓舞自己、从而走向人生的辉煌。对于每一个渴望成功的人来说,本书都会是个不错的启发工具。
  • 破灭仙神界

    破灭仙神界

    何为仙,何为神?这世界上真的有仙神的存在吗?苍茫大地,千古苍穹,遥远的过去发生过什么?历代强者不停的追溯,许多真相都已成为尘埃。登临绝顶,俯瞰大地,傲视千古,一代天骄战魂凝聚重踏修炼之路,看他如何让历史从现?如何让仙神重临大陆......
  • 公主,请留步,和我一辈子

    公主,请留步,和我一辈子

    她是一国公主,他是另一国将军,大战在即,总有一方被打的落花流水,她遇见了他,他们之间,将会有怎样的故事?
  • 为人处世方与圆

    为人处世方与圆

    随着社会的发展,社交越来越多样化了。朋友来往、同事相处、夫妻关系等等,每一个社交圈子都有其独特性,对于不善于处理这些关系的人来说,每一个圈子就是一道解不开的难题。只要懂得以方圆策略指导个人的社交行为,社交就会成为一件驾轻就熟的事情。为人处世知方圆,尽是人间四月天。
  • 号外:那是谁的儿子

    号外:那是谁的儿子

    号外号外,娶一个女人就能得到亿亿的财产,还能得到超天才智商小萌娃一枚。传说追溯到三年前,一场原本甜蜜的游轮蜜月,却让乐正爱雪儿永远失去了爱她的李佑无,包括所有的亲人。从那以后她心灰意冷,隐姓改名小妖,一场意外却让她再次站在风口浪尖上。身体被曝光,探秘者蜂拥而至。不爱,被爱,伤痛,逃避。当一切尘埃落定,海难的真相却浮出水面。还能往哪里逃,天涯海角,却沦陷在他的眼里……
  • 转机时刻(1970-1979)

    转机时刻(1970-1979)

    本书详细介绍了从1970年至十一届三中全会结束这一时间段内在我国发生的重大历史事件,“文化大革命”的第五个年头,按毛泽东的估计,通过前几年的大乱应该达到“大治”以“圆满结束”这场革命。可是,树欲静而风不止。林彪在设国家主席问题上挑起了事端。长达十几年的全国性的学大寨运动,并没有改变我国广大农村贫困落后的面貌,反而使农村生产力遭到了巨大的破坏。本书从史实出发,把中华民族在这个时期的发展转机展示在大家面前,让读者能够很好的了解历史,借鉴历史,以历史来规避自己的一言一行。
  • 新妻撩人

    新妻撩人

    父亲公司破产跳楼身亡,母亲接受不了事实神志不清。为了母亲,她只能替了她的姐妹平白受了那三年的牢狱之灾。三年后,她出来第一件事便是去扰了她的订婚宴。但也从此与萧年揪扯不清。艾夕问,你为什么总是缠着我。他答,因为你还欠我一个未婚妻。后来,他向她伸出了复仇的橄榄枝,将她引诱至自己的身边。他说,来到我身边,我帮你查清一切。她犹豫,她迟疑,她封锁自己的内心。到最后真相大白的时候,他的深情与付出能否让她放下三年以来的执念。
  • 费马大定理:一个困惑了世间智者358年的谜

    费马大定理:一个困惑了世间智者358年的谜

    《费马大定理:一个困惑了世间智者358年的谜》是关于一个困惑了世间智者358年的谜题的传奇。书中既有振奋人心的故事讲述方式,也有引人入胜的科学发现的历史。西蒙·辛格讲述了一个英国人,经过数年秘密辛苦的工作,终于解决了最具挑战性的数学问题的艰辛旅程。