登陆注册
26289300000098

第98章 CHAPTER XXV(2)

"Always be truthful, my dear boy, and then you may feel that Clara Middleton will always love you."

"But, Miss Middleton, when you're married you won't be Clara Middleton."

"I certainly shall, Crossjay."

"No, you won't, because I'm so fond of your name!"

She considered, and said: "You have warned me, Crossjay, and I shall not marry. I shall wait," she was going to say, "for you," but turned the hesitation to a period. "Is the village where I posted my letter the day before yesterday too far for you?"

Crossjay howled in contempt. "Next to Clara, my favourite's Lucy," he said.

"I thought Clara came next to Nelson," said she; "and a long way off too, if you're not going to be a landlubber."

"I'm not going to be a landlubber. Miss Middleton, you may be absolutely positive on your solemn word."

"You're getting to talk like one a little now and then, Crossjay."

"Then I won't talk at all."

He stuck to his resolution for one whole minute.

Clara hoped that on this morning of a doubtful though imperative venture she had done some good.

They walked fast to cover the distance to the village post-office, and back before the breakfast hour: and they had plenty of time, arriving too early for the opening of the door, so that Crossjay began to dance with an appetite, and was despatched to besiege a bakery. Clara felt lonely without him: apprehensively timid in the shuttered, unmoving village street. She was glad of his return. When at last her letter was handed to her, on the testimony of the postman that she was the lawful applicant, Crossjay and she put out on a sharp trot to be back at the Hall in good time. She took a swallowing glance of the first page of Lucy's writing:

"Telegraph, and I will meet you. I will supply you with everything you can want for the two nights, if you cannot stop longer."

That was the gist of the letter. A second. less voracious, glance at it along the road brought sweetness:--Lucy wrote:

"Do I love you as I did? my best friend, you must fall into unhappiness to have the answer to that."

Clara broke a silence.

"Yes, dear Crossjay, and if you like you shall have another walk with me after breakfast. But, remember, you must not say where you have gone with me. I shall give you twenty shillings to go and buy those bird's eggs and the butterflies you want for your collection; and mind, promise me, to-day is your last day of truancy. Tell Mr. Whitford how ungrateful you know you have been, that he may have some hope of you. You know the way across the fields to the railway station?"

"You save a mile; you drop on the road by Combline's mill, and then there's another five-minutes" cut, and the rest's road."

"Then, Crossjay, immediately after breakfast run round behind the pheasantry, and there I'll find you. And if any one comes to you before I come, say you are admiring the plumage of the Himalaya--the beautiful Indian bird; and if we're found together, we run a race, and of course you can catch me, but you mustn't until we're out of sight. Tell Mr. Vernon at night--tell Mr. Whitford at night you had the money from me as part of my allowance to you for pocket-money. I used to like to have pocket-money, Crossjay. And you may tell him I gave you the holiday, and I may write to him for his excuse, if he is not too harsh to grant it. He can be very harsh."

"You look right into his eyes next time, Miss Middleton. I used to think him awful till he made me look at him. He says men ought to look straight at one another, just as we do when he gives me my boxing-lesson, and then we won't have quarrelling half so much. I can't recollect everything he says."

"You are not bound to, Crossjay."

"No, but you like to hear."

"Really, dear boy. I can't accuse myself of having told you that."

"No, but, Miss Middleton, you do. And he's fond of your singing and playing on the piano, and watches you."

"We shall be late if we don't mind," said Clara, starting to a pace close on a run.

"They were in time for a circuit in the park to the wild double cherry-blossom, no longer all white. Clara gazed up from under it, where she had imagined a fairer visible heavenliness than any other sight of earth had ever given her. That was when Vernon lay beneath. But she had certainly looked above, not at him. The tree seemed sorrowful in its withering flowers of the colour of trodden snow.

Crossjay resumed the conversation.

"He says ladies don't like him much."

"Who says that?"

"Mr. Whitford."

"Were those his words?"

"I forget the words: but he said they wouldn't be taught by him, like me, ever since you came; and since you came I've liked him ten times more."

"The more you like him the more I shall like you, Crossjay."

The boy raised a shout and scampered away to Sir Willoughby, at the appearance of whom Clara felt herself nipped and curling inward. Crossjay ran up to him with every sign of pleasure. Yet he had not mentioned him during the walk; and Clara took it for a sign that the boy understood the entire satisfaction Willoughby had in mere shows of affection, and acted up to it. Hardly blaming Crossjay, she was a critic of the scene, for the reason that youthful creatures who have ceased to love a person, hunger for evidence against him to confirm their hard animus, which will seem to them sometimes, when he is not immediately irritating them, brutish, because they can not analyze it and reduce it to the multitude of just antagonisms whereof it came. It has passed by large accumulation into a sombre and speechless load upon the senses, and fresh evidence, the smallest item, is a champion to speak for it. Being about to do wrong, she grasped at this eagerly, and brooded on the little of vital and truthful that there was in the man and how he corrupted the boy. Nevertheless, she instinctively imitated Crossjay in an almost sparkling salute to him.

"Good-morning, Willoughby; it was not a morning to lose: have you been out long?"

He retained her hand. "My dear Clara! and you, have you not overfatigued yourself? Where have you been?"

"Round--everywhere! And I am certainly not tired."

同类推荐
  • E021

    E021

    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。
  • 小五虎演义

    小五虎演义

    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。
  • 见闻纪训

    见闻纪训

    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。
  • 书谱

    书谱

    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。
  • 太上玄一真人说劝诫法_轮妙经

    太上玄一真人说劝诫法_轮妙经

    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
  • 冷酷校草的调皮小妹

    冷酷校草的调皮小妹

    决定好好的玩一玩自己的哥哥,就这样她来到了“聖熙贵族学院”。没想到哥哥居然是学校四大校草之首,在聖熙遇见了他们,当身份被发现面对突如其来的表白她会如何?当真相揭开她又会如何?她的真命天子是他?还是他?亦或者是他?她的倒来是好是坏?当调皮小妹变成冷酷公主又会怎样?
  • 二零一五

    二零一五

    公元2010年,华国第六次人口普查,计得全国总人口十三亿三千二百八十一万零八百六十九人。……公元2015年7月9日正午,日全食,全球异变。……“白骨露于野,千里无鸡鸣。生民百无一,念之断人肠。”苏恪轻诵着曹孟德的《蒿里行》,望着已成废墟的家乡,痛哭流涕。九死一生,如今又为哪般?
  • 后宫之凤凰于飞

    后宫之凤凰于飞

    云惜宁,云家嫡女,虽不得宠,却逃不过进入后宫的命运。草草一生?还是母仪天下?不,她要的,只是一生一世一双人。听闻当今皇上性情残暴,可她入宫后看到的皇上却是对她温柔无比。难道皇上换了个人?某不要脸的男:当然没有,我只是对你温柔啦!!
  • 废柴七小姐逆天容颜

    废柴七小姐逆天容颜

    曾经不可一世的她却被亲妹妹所背叛以为美好生活开始却不知组织早已将她遗弃来到全新的世界成为紫荆大陆的风云人物遇上了是撒旦亦是天使的他将重新书写冰璃月的时代
  • 这个福晋不太冷

    这个福晋不太冷

    她不过就是相个亲,又不是做了什么十恶不赦的事,用得着以穿越来测试人品高低么?好吧,新的家人都还不错,对她也很好,只是身份有些麻烦,享受富贵的生活,然后贡献出自己的婚姻。上天还真是一点亏都不吃。只是为毛她会嫁给四四,她不是姓瓜尔佳氏么?她怎么不记得四大爷的后院里还有这么一位侧福晋?虽说嫁给某四,开车不用担心油价上涨,失业不必担心没钱养家,三餐也不会没有着落,但是为得着可着劲地生娃不,她又不是某种只知道吃睡加一胎生很多的动物……--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 圣皇

    圣皇

    胜者为皇,三千大世界,功法亿万,一部天地衍生‘黄帝心经’被一个平凡竖子得到,古老沧桑的神秘死城.恒古久远便存在的无边血渊降临世界,一个不一样的故事徐徐展开!
  • 万界天歌

    万界天歌

    一指山河碎,一掌乾坤灭,一剑斩尽日月星辰,抬手举足间星河崩灭。天骄辈出、强者林立的世界里,少年自太清宗走出,逆冲直上,一路高歌猛进,横推四方敌······
  • 《我愿用我一生来等你》

    《我愿用我一生来等你》

    她的初吻在她不知道的时候被他夺走了,但是她只当他是哥们,从来没有任何非分之想,这可苦了他,不过没有关系,我愿意等你,等你到海枯石烂,等你到天荒地老,如果你还不爱我,那我就会站在你的身后,永远为你默默的守护,只要你开心就好……
  • 乱世之仗剑逍遥

    乱世之仗剑逍遥

    一叶一菩提,一草一木皆因果;一花一世界,一人一生皆为空,身处乱世如何,纵使天下人负我又如何。吾身不灭唯我逍遥
  • 存在之镜与智慧之灯

    存在之镜与智慧之灯

    本书是作者最新力作,在当代文学批评语境下对当代小说叙事研究的文化与美学向度作了最新阐述,显示出当代学术强烈的时代感和前卫特色。