登陆注册
26281800000159

第159章 Chapter XLVI Depths and Heights(3)

If he interested her at all, he would need them all. The eyes of her were at once so elusive, so direct, so friendly, so cool and keen. "You will have to be interesting, indeed, to interest me," they seemed to say; and yet they were by no means averse, apparently, to a hearty camaraderie. That nose-wrinkling smile said as much. Here was by no means a Stephanie Platow, nor yet a Rita Sohlberg. He could not assume her as he had Ella Hubby, or Florence Cochrane, or Cecily Haguenin. Here was an iron individuality with a soul for romance and art and philosophy and life. He could not take her as he had those others. And yet Berenice was really beginning to think more than a little about Cowperwood. He must be an extraordinary man; her mother said so, and the newspapers were always mentioning his name and noting his movements.

A little later, at Southampton, whither she and her mother had gone, they met again. Together with a young man by the name of Greanelle, Cowperwood and Berenice had gone into the sea to bathe.

It was a wonderful afternoon.

To the east and south and west spread the sea, a crinkling floor of blue, and to their left, as they faced it, was a lovely outward-curving shore of tawny sand. Studying Berenice in blue-silk bathing costume and shoes, Cowperwood had been stung by the wonder of passing life--how youth comes in, ever fresh and fresh, and age goes out. Here he was, long crowded years of conflict and experience behind him, and yet this twenty-year-old girl, with her incisive mind and keen tastes, was apparently as wise in matters of general import as himself. He could find no flaw in her armor in those matters which they could discuss. Her knowledge and comments were so ripe and sane, despite a tendency to pose a little, which was quite within her rights. Because Greanelle had bored her a little she had shunted him off and was amusing herself talking to Cowperwood, who fascinated her by his compact individuality.

"Do you know," she confided to him, on this occasion, "I get so very tired of young men sometimes. They can be so inane. I do declare, they are nothing more than shoes and ties and socks and canes strung together in some unimaginable way. Vaughn Greanelle is for all the world like a perambulating manikin to-day. He is just an English suit with a cane attached walking about."

"Well, bless my soul," commented Cowperwood, "what an indictment!"

"It's true," she replied. "He knows nothing at all except polo, and the latest swimming-stroke, and where everybody is, and who is going to marry who. Isn't it dull?"

She tossed her head back and breathed as though to exhale the fumes of the dull and the inane from her inmost being.

"Did you tell him that?" inquired Cowperwood, curiously.

"Certainly I did."

"I don't wonder he looks so solemn," he said, turning and looking back at Greanelle and Mrs. Carter; they were sitting side by side in sand-chairs, the former beating the sand with his toes. "You're a curious girl, Berenice," he went on, familiarly. "You are so direct and vital at times.

"Not any more than you are, from all I can hear," she replied, fixing him with those steady eyes. "Anyhow, why should I be bored? He is so dull. He follows me around out here all the time, and I don't want him."

She tossed her head and began to run up the beach to where bathers were fewer and fewer, looking back at Cowperwood as if to say, "Why don't you follow?" He developed a burst of enthusiasm and ran quite briskly, overtaking her near some shallows where, because of a sandbar offshore, the waters were thin and bright.

"Oh, look!" exclaimed Berenice, when he came up. "See, the fish!

O-oh!"

She dashed in to where a few feet offshore a small school of minnows as large as sardines were playing, silvery in the sun. She ran as she had for the bird, doing her best to frighten them into a neighboring pocket or pool farther up on the shore. Cowperwood, as gay as a boy of ten, joined in the chase. He raced after them briskly, losing one school, but pocketing another a little farther on and calling to her to come.

"Oh!" exclaimed Berenice at one point. "Here they are now. Come quick! Drive them in here!"

Her hair was blowy, her face a keen pink, her eyes an electric blue by contrast. She was bending low over the water--Cowperwood also--their hands outstretched, the fish, some five in all, nervously dancing before them in their efforts to escape. All at once, having forced them into a corner, they dived; Berenice actually caught one. Cowperwood missed by a fraction, but drove the fish she did catch into her hands.

"Oh," she exclaimed, jumping up, "how wonderful! It's alive. I caught it."

She danced up and down, and Cowperwood, standing before her, was sobered by her charm. He felt an impulse to speak to her of his affection, to tell her how delicious she was to him.

"You," he said, pausing over the word and giving it special emphasis--"you are the only thing here that is wonderful to me."

She looked at him a moment, the live fish in her extended hands, her eyes keying to the situation. For the least fraction of a moment she was uncertain, as he could see, how to take this. Many men had been approximative before. It was common to have compliments paid to her. But this was different. She said nothing, but fixed him with a look which said quite plainly, "You had better not say anything more just now, I think." Then, seeing that he understood, that his manner softened, and that he was troubled, she crinkled her nose gaily and added: "It's like fairyland. I feel as though I had caught it out of another world." Cowperwood understood. The direct approach was not for use in her case; and yet there was something, a camaraderie, a sympathy which he felt and which she felt. A girls' school, conventions, the need of socially placing herself, her conservative friends, and their viewpoint--all were working here. If he were only single now, she told herself, she would be willing to listen to him in a very different spirit, for he was charming. But this way-- And he, for his part, concluded that here was one woman whom he would gladly marry if she would have him.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 牛桃我在回忆里等你

    牛桃我在回忆里等你

    :“如果回到八年前,留住我吗?”:“不会,我会和你一起走”
  • 全能神眼魔法师

    全能神眼魔法师

    当一个屌丝得知自己是个外星人,还莫名其妙得了个神眼,会在都市里碰撞出怎样的火花呢?高冷校花,暴力女警,邻家小妹,纷纷到来。
  • 仙医王者

    仙医王者

    一代玄门大宗主重生到现代都市,刁蛮任性的女店主,性感妖娆的御姐,青春可爱的大小姐,纯真呆萌的小萝莉……各色美女慕名求医,纷至沓来。妙医圣手,治宠治人,边行医边修炼,顺便为妹子们排忧解难。且看最牛仙医如何混迹花都,逍遥称王!
  • 斩月星决

    斩月星决

    他、意外穿越、获得绝世法术、可却不敢滥用、每一次的释放都会给自己招来杀身之祸。他、奇遇连连、却每一次都是生死一线。他、身世平凡、却背负着不平凡的债务。从而成为了一个背黑锅之人、遭受众人四处追杀、他、究竟有着怎样的命运、最终能否摆脱一切世俗……
  • 某逗比的旅途

    某逗比的旅途

    这是一个逗比在各个世界中旅游,开开水晶宫,打打小怪兽的故事
  • 万年之恋:霓虹雾

    万年之恋:霓虹雾

    世界上分为六个种类,其五种是人、鬼、神、魔、妖,还有一种比较特殊,叫灵。而界,分类为人间、鬼界、神界、魔界、妖界、灵界。有一年,妖界妖王企图统一全界,大开杀戒。妖、魔、灵界陷入混乱。神界试图阻止妖界,当胜利的曙光就在眼前时,从未插入过战斗的鬼界竟和妖界联合,神界人员惨败,一切,又没入黑暗。灵界蜀山的灵狐公主在逃亡中被妖界抓走,当做了人质。妖界威胁灵界,如果不投降,他们就杀了灵狐公主。就在灵界犹豫不决时,机智灵敏的灵狐公主为了不连累灵界,毅然选择越狱。故事,就要从这儿开始说起了――
  • 混沌之邪神

    混沌之邪神

    这是一个强者为尊的世界,有着各式各样的修炼体质,还有诸多上古遗迹,秘境,洞天福地,等你来揭晓!当主角到来,将会开启一段怎样的传奇之旅.......
  • 《杀手穿越:倾世绝恋》

    《杀手穿越:倾世绝恋》

    额、、我堂堂世界顶级杀手—萧晓杀人如麻的人、、竟一不小被车撞灰?太?辶税桑。浚?br/>天、竟然还是未来的皇后哦搓、算了嫁就嫁吧大不了当个米虫-----------------------------------------------------啪啪‘两声华丽丽的坠落声两个身材魁梧的蛮夷壮汉爬了起来我收起腿【好’】当今皇上慕容风拍手【‘皇后、这招叫什么?】’【哦‘回皇上这招叫慕容风劈腿】我,冷冷的回答【劈腿?慕容风?皇后这为何有朕的名字?】慕容风疑惑的问【回皇上这名字叫风劈腿、只因我是慕容国得人所以我才会加上慕容两个字】【哦,原来是这样啊,好,赏皇后白银万两,黄金千两】
  • 渔非鱼尘之外

    渔非鱼尘之外

    他们为追求戏剧化的效果(各种人为的蒙太奇),营造紧张营造逼格,而事实并非电视电影和他人所说的;当所有变得简单,操作与种种越来越象协奏曲,而你的指端穿梭或停驻于琴键~~~键盘的滴答,就是你听到的曲录~~~渔非鱼,却没几人能懂,非得往那些绚丽浮华的坑里跳,或许这便是芸芸之红尘.....而渔在尘之外~
  • 跃龙

    跃龙

    一位平凡的警校实习生,莫名获得了超能力,看我如何舞动乾坤!