登陆注册
26285900000047

第47章

The black trimmings and drooping feathers set off the ivory pallor of her face and made the wonderful hair gleam like threads of precious metal.

She turned her head to judge it at very angle,surprised at her own beauty.

Presently she lifted it off her head as tenderly as if it were a crown,with the reverence of women for the things that increase their beauty.

She put it down as if it were made of glass.

"I'll git Miss Jones to alter the bow,an'put the feathers farther back,"she said,like one in a dream.

"I thought yer wouldn't wear it at any price,"said Chook,delighted,but puzzled.

"Sometimes you talk like a man that's bin drinkin',"said Pinkey,with the faintest possible smile.

A DEATH IN THE FAMILY

It was past ten o'clock,and one by one,with a sudden,swift collapse,each shop in Botany Road extinguished its lights,leaving a blank gap in the shining row of glass windows.Mrs Yabsley turned into Cardigan Street and,taking a firmer grip of her parcels,mounted the hill slowly on account of her breath.She still continued to shop at the last minute,in a panic,as her mother had done before her,proud of her habit of being the last customer at the butcher's and the grocer's.She looked up at the sky and,being anxious for the morrow,tried to forecast the weather.

A sharp wind was blowing,and the stars winked cheerfully in a windswept sky.There was every promise of a fine day,but to make sure,she tried the corn on her left foot.The corn gave no sign,and she thought with satisfaction of her new companion,Miss Perkins.

For years she had searched high and low for some penniless woman to share her cottage and Jonah's allowance,and her pensioners had gone out of their way to invent new methods of robbing her.But Miss Perkins (whom she had found shivering and hungry on the doorstep as she was going to bed one night and had taken in without asking questions,as was her habit)guarded Mrs Yabsley's property like a watchdog.For Cardigan Street,when it learned that Mrs Yabsley only worked for the fun of the thing,had leaped to the conclusion that she was rolling in money.They knew that she had given Jonah his start in life,and felt certain that she owned half of the Silver Shoe.

So the older residents had come to look on Mrs Yabsley as their property,and they formed a sort of club to sponge on her methodically.They ran out of tea,sugar and flour,and kept the landlord waiting while they ran up to borrow a shilling.They each had their own day,and kept to it,respecting the rights of their friends to a share of the plunder.None went away empty-handed,and they looked with unfriendly eyes on any new arrivals who might interfere with their rights.They thought they deceived the old woman,and the tea and groceries had a finer flavour in consequence;but they would have been surprised to know that Mrs Yabsley had herself fixed her allowance from Jonah at two pounds a week and her rent.

"That's enough money fer me to play the fool with,an'if it don't do much good,it can't do much 'arm,"she had remarked,with a mysterious smile,when he had offered her anything she needed to live in comfort.

The terrible Miss Perkins had altered all that.She had discovered that Mrs Harris was paying for a new hat with the shilling a week she got for Johnny's medicine;that Mrs Thorpe smelt of drink half an hour after she had got two shillings towards the rent;that Mr Hawkins had given his wife a black eye for saying that he was strong enough to go to work again.

Mrs Yabsley had listened with a perplexing smile to her companion's cries of indignation.

"I could 'ave told yer all that meself,"she said,"but wot's it matter?

Who am I to sit in judgment on 'em?They know I've got more money than Iwant,but they're too proud to ask fer it openly.People with better shirts on their backs are built the same way,if all I 'ear is true.I've bin poor meself an'yer may think there's somethin'wrong in me 'ead,but if I've got a shillin',an'some poor devil's got nuthin',I reckon I owe 'im sixpence.It isn't likely fer you to understand such things,bein'brought up in the lap of luxury,but don't yer run away with the idea that poor people are the only ones who are ashamed to beg an'willin'to steal."Mrs Yabsley had asked no questions when she had found Miss Perkins on the step,but little by little her companion had dropped hints of former glory,and then launched into a surprising tale.She was the daughter of a rich man,who had died suddenly,and left her at the mercy of a stepmother and she had grown desperate and fled,choosing to earn her own bread till her cousin arrived,who was on his way from England to marry her.On several occasions she had forgotten that her name was Perkins,and when Mrs Yabsley dryly commented on this,she confessed that she had borrowed the name from her maid when she fled.And she whispered her real name in the ear of Mrs Yabsley,who marvelled,and promised to keep the secret.

Mrs Yabsley,who was no fool,looked for some proof of the story,and was satisfied.The girl was young and pretty,and gave herself the airs of a duchess.Mrs Swadling,indeed,had spent so much of her time at the cottage trying to worm her secret from the genteel stranger that she unconsciously imitated her aristocratic manner and way of talking,until Mr Swadling had brought her to her senses by getting drunk and giving her a pair of black eyes,which destroyed all resemblance to the fascinating stranger.Mrs Swadling had learned nothing,but she assured half the street that Miss Perkins's father had turned her out of doors for refusing to marry a man old enough to be her father,and the other half that a forged will had robbed her of thousands and a carriage and pair.

Cardigan Street had watched the aristocracy from the gallery of the theatre with sharp,envious eyes,and reported their doings to Mrs Yabsley,but Miss Perkins was the first specimen she had ever seen in the flesh.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 碎梦记事薄之伤离

    碎梦记事薄之伤离

    望着黄沙渐渐掩埋了昔日富饶的西域小镇,我的心也渐渐冷却了。凡人皆希望长生不老,白日飞升,然凡人并不知神仙在漫长的岁月,所遭受的寂寞有多痛。。。。
  • 越世情缘,相爱很晚:我就是她

    越世情缘,相爱很晚:我就是她

    公元714年,一怀孕的白衣受伤女子坠入蓝罔湖。顿时,红光四射,湖中绽放出一朵妖艳的曼陀罗花。一初生的女娃坐在上面,眼神透着尖利,完全不像孩童有的懵懂无知。但愿1300多年后的今天,她会笑过红尘……
  • 会说一口漂亮话

    会说一口漂亮话

    《会说一口漂亮话:十天打造说话高手》通过详细的指导和深刻的启示,教我们在竞争激烈的时代里,怎样与人交流,说出一口漂亮话,办成一些自己想做的事情。《会说一口漂亮话:十天打造说话高手》是人才未必有口才,有口才必定是人才。会说一口漂亮话的人,必定是左右逢源,如鱼得水;不会说话的人,势必处处受限,寸步难行。
  • 弟子规

    弟子规

    《弟子规》,原名《训蒙文》,据国学学者王俊闳考证:为清朝康熙年间秀才李毓秀所作。其内容采用《论语》“学而篇”第六条的文义,列述弟子在家、出外、待人、接物与学习上应该恪守的守则规范。后经清朝贾存仁修订改编,并改名为《弟子规》。其中记录了孔子的108项言行,共有360句、1080个字,三字一句,两句或四句连意,合辙押韵,朗朗上口;全篇先为“总叙”,然后分为“入则孝、出则悌、谨、信、泛爱众、亲仁、余力学文”七个部分。
  • 还好不是你

    还好不是你

    莫沫第一次见到他的时候,是在高中的开学典礼上,那时,闺密石楠还调侃了她。她喜欢他,可那种喜欢只限于欣赏,直到那一天,阳光下,他的转头一笑,彻底让莫沫动了心。就在快要高考的时候,她终于鼓起勇气对他坦白了自己的想法,不出所料,在一起了,可是......如果,她知道,她与他之间会变成这个样子,怎样,她都不会告诉他,她喜欢他。在我遇到你的那段时间里,回忆是甜的,是痛的,是快乐的,但,也是心酸的,再见了,我最爱的人。
  • 花开半夏琉璃梦

    花开半夏琉璃梦

    第一次见面,是在晚宴上,吊带裙不小心掉在了他的脚上第二次见面,是在大街上,被石头绊倒,夺走了他的初吻第三次见面...“你敢娶我吗!”霸道的声音“你敢嫁,我就敢娶”声音温柔体贴,但又不失霸气婚后:“夫人在做什么”“不告诉你”“嗯?”“唔...”
  • 富二代的腹黑妻

    富二代的腹黑妻

    深夜的繁华,难掩美女内心的寂寞,灯红酒绿下发出好想恋爱的哀叹,可难忘的初恋,始终是挥不去的思念,遇男人,遇形似的初恋情人,痴情追求的富二代,青涩萌动弟弟,遇上儿时竹马,遇疯子,遇陷害,家事情事身边事国事,无不缠绕。她还会迎来自己爱的春天吗?
  • Q&A马云与员工内部对话

    Q&A马云与员工内部对话

    首次曝光阿里内部思想碰撞的场景,首次展现了一个更轻松、睿智、激情的马云;一群青春逼人的员工,一些奔放的提问。这是一个企业家和年轻员工、创业者的对话,这是一些不停推动着我们思维的对话。这不仅仅是马云与员工的对话,这其实也是马云和你的对话,本书从第二人称“你”作为切入视角,以此希望作为读者的你,可以更贴切地去感受“Q&A”的氛围,让读者仿佛身临其境!
  • 重生之前妻买一送一

    重生之前妻买一送一

    一朝重生,她进入了一个二十二岁女人的身体,醒来时却被迫结婚。然而此时此刻曾跟自己携手步入殿堂的男人正大肆宣传着他的新婚礼!这个她爱了五年之久的男人居然如此无情,既然如此,她又怎么会轻易放过他呢?亲爱的,别忘了你不仁我不义!
  • 中国传统文化选编(声律启蒙)

    中国传统文化选编(声律启蒙)

    长期以来,中华传统文化的精华,滋养浸润着一代又一代中华儿女,它陶冶了人们的情操,孕育了中国人的传统美德,增长了人们的智慧,也不断推动着人们对自己民族优秀文化传统的继承。今天,我们少年儿童一代能对民族文化的精粹部分有所了解,将有利于他们文化素养的提高,促进健康人格的养成,也是使他们能受益终身的最基本的启蒙教育和素质教育。