登陆注册
26490800000046

第46章

In an instant, from what he had been he became the frank and guileless nobleman. "A slip of the tongue, Captain Percy!" he cried, his white teeth showing and his hand raised in a gesture of deprecation. "A natural thing, seeing how often, how very often, I have so addressed this lady in the days when we had not the pleasure of your acquaintance." He turned to her and bowed, until the feather in his hat swept the ground. "I won then," he said. "I shall win again - Mistress Percy," and passed on to the seat that had been reserved for him.

The game began. I was to lead one side, and young Clement the other. At the last moment he came over to me. "I am out of it, Captain Percy," he announced with a rueful face. "My lord there asks me to give him my place. When we were hunting yesterday, and the stag turned upon me, he came between and thrust his knife into the brute, which else might have put an end to my hunting forever and a day: so you see I can't refuse him. Plague take it all! and Dorothy Gookin sitting there watching!"

My lord and I stood forward, each with a bowl in his hand. We looked toward the Governor. "My lord first, as becometh his rank," he said. My lord stooped and threw, and his bowl went swiftly over the grass, turned, and rested not a hands'-breadth from the jack. I threw. "One is as near as the other!" cried Master Macocke for the judges. A murmur arose from the crowd, and my lord swore beneath his breath. He and I retreated to our several sides, and Rolfe and West took our places. While they and those that followed bowled, the crowd, attentive though it was, still talked and laughed, and laid wagers upon its favorites; but when my lord and I again stood forth, the noise was hushed, and men and women stared with all their eyes. He delivered, and his bowl touched the jack. He straightened himself, with a smile, and I heard Jeremy Sparrow behind me groan; but my bowl too kissed the jack. The crowd began to laugh with sheer delight, but my lord turned red and his brows drew together. We had but one turn more. While we waited, I marked his black eyes studying every inch of the ground between him and that small white ball, to strike which, at that moment, I verily believe he would have given the King's favor. All men pray, though they pray not to the same god. As he stood there, when his time had come, weighing the bowl in his hand, I knew that he prayed to his d‘mon, fate, star, whatever thing he raised an altar to and bent before. He threw, and I followed, while the throng held its breath. Master Macocke rose to his feet. "It's a tie, my masters!" he exclaimed.

The excited crowd surged forward, and a babel of voices arose.

"Silence, all!" cried the Governor. "Let them play it out!"

My lord threw, and his bowl stopped perilously near the shining mark. As I stepped to my place a low and supplicating "O Lord!" came to my ears from the lips and the heart of the preacher, who had that morning thundered against the toys of this world. I drew back my arm and threw with all my force. A cry arose from the throng, and my lord ground his heel into the earth. The bowl, spurning the jack before it, rushed on, until both buried themselves in the red and yellow leaves that filled the trench.

I turned and bowed to my antagonist. "You bowl well, my lord," I said. "Had you had the forest training of eye and arm, our fortunes might have been reversed."

He looked me up and down. "You are kind, sir," he said thickly. "

'To-day to thee, to-morrow to me.' I give you joy of your petty victory."

He turned squarely from me, and stood with his face downstream.

I was speaking to Rolfe and to the few - not even all of that side for which I had won - who pressed around me, when he wheeled.

"Your Honor," he cried to the Governor, who had paused beside Mistress Percy, "is not the Due Return high-pooped? Doth she not carry a blue pennant, and hath she not a gilt siren for figurehead?"

"Ay," answered the Governor, lifting his head from the hand he had kissed with ponderous gallantry. "What then, my lord?"

"Then to-morrow has dawned, sir captain," said my lord to me.

"Sure, Dame Venus and her blind son have begged for me favorable winds; for the Due Return has come again."

The game that had been played was forgotten for that day. The hogshead of sweet scented, lying to one side, wreathed with bright vines, was unclaimed of either party; the servants who brought forward the keg of canary dropped their burden, and stared with the rest. All looked down the river, and all saw the Due Return coming up the broad, ruffled stream, the wind from the sea filling her sails, the tide with her, the gilt mermaid on her prow just rising from the rushing foam. She came as swiftly as a bird to its nest.

None had thought to see her for at least ten days.

Upon all there fell a sudden realization that it was the word of the King, feathered by the command of the Company, that was hurrying, arrow-like, toward us. All knew what the Company's orders would be, - must needs be, - and the Tudor sovereigns were not so long in the grave that men had forgot to fear the wrath of kings. The crowd drew back from me as from a man plague-spotted. Only Rolfe, Sparrow, and the Indian stood their ground.

The Governor turned from staring downstream. "The game is played, gentlemen," he announced abruptly. "The wind grows colder, too, and clouds are gathering. This fair company will pardon me if I dismiss them somewhat sooner than is our wont.

The next sunny day we will play again. Give you God den, gentles."

The crowd stood not upon the order of its going, but streamed away to the river bank, whence it could best watch the oncoming ship. My lord, after a most triumphant bow, swept off with his train in the direction of the guest house. With him went Master Pory. The Governor drew nearer to me. "Captain Percy," he said, lowering his voice, "I am going now to mine own house. The letters which yonder ship brings will be in my hands in less than an hour. When I have read them, I shall perforce obey their instructions. Before I have them I will see you, if you so wish."

同类推荐
  • 后阴门

    后阴门

    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。
  • 就正录

    就正录

    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。
  • 莅蒙平政录

    莅蒙平政录

    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。
  • 孙子算经

    孙子算经

    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。
  • 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。
热门推荐
  • 贵女有毒:邪王的至尊宠妻

    贵女有毒:邪王的至尊宠妻

    呕心沥血助心上人登上皇帝宝座,反被狠毒杀害,一尸两命!不甘惨死的她重生在痴傻的堂妹身上,可这群人连单纯的堂妹都不放过!好!就看她装疯卖傻,扮猪吃虎,将他们一个一个拉向地狱!
  • 寻仙之九重天劫

    寻仙之九重天劫

    这是一本正统的《寻仙》游戏剧情小说。一直以来,我都有一个很庞大的梦想,我要把寻仙中发生的故事写下来。寻仙表面是一些家长里短,妖怪偷东西伤人的普通故事,实际在剧情上的布局是非常庞大的。我让那些玩寻仙但是来不及看剧情的玩家,能喜欢上寻仙的剧情。甚至让那些不玩寻仙的人也能通过我的文字感受到寻仙的美。这是我的一个梦,我会努力用尽我的一切去完成它。寻仙的水墨美术片风格以及上海美影厂的一些动画片元素,让我这个喜欢怀旧的人在游戏中获得了非常独特的体验。尽管寻仙有很多的缺点和不足,在我心里真的是一款很棒的游戏。———谨以此文,献给那些和我一样热爱《寻仙》的忠实玩家。
  • 至尊傻妃

    至尊傻妃

    只手遮天、呼风唤雨的财阀董事莫铁心一朝被小三残害,穿越到疯癫痴傻、怯懦无能的相府嫡出小姐赫连和雅身上。退婚?嘲笑?羞辱?那又如何?从来只有她宰人,何时轮到他们嚣张了!勾心斗角也好,尔虞我诈也罢,只要别惹到她,她都可以得过且过,但为何偏偏总有那么些个不知死活的人来屡屡犯她底线?而那个常年戴着面具屡次帮助她的男人又是谁?一波波的阴谋诡计扑面而来,她又岂还是原来那个坐以待毙、任人摆布的懦弱女子!惊艳重生,冠盖满京华,众人傻眼,痴傻原是表象,看相府嫡女如何逆转乾坤,翻云覆雨!--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 薰衣草的禁锢

    薰衣草的禁锢

    他,本来是应该如其他孩子一样有着一个美好的童年,可因那次的事情使他改变了,他变得稳重了,变得不相信任何人,直到遇见她……她,有一个幸福的家,过着爹疼娘爱的日子,直到九岁,她亲眼目睹她敬爱的父亲亲手杀死她的母亲,她最爱的女人。她变了,变得成熟,变得不相信爱情,可是遇到他……冰山如他,当另一个雪山闯进了他的世界,不知是他照亮了她,还是她融化了他。爱缘于情,情止于爱,一开始不同的生长环境,注定有着纠缠。因为缘,因为爱,又牵扯着,无法忘怀……
  • 江湖有道

    江湖有道

    有的人一生为国,却无名而终。有的人徇私舞弊,却风光无限。天地不仁,成败无道。那是因为公道在人心,有人就有江湖,江湖不比人生。人生无常,但江湖有道。
  • 腹黑校草的小呆萌

    腹黑校草的小呆萌

    逃婚出来的冷心默无意碰到了自己的男神一段冷茗.一段同居生活就此展开.冰冷腹黑的他,可爱呆萌的她.
  • 尾指的相守

    尾指的相守

    清新校园风,原创作品,女主角吴真依、男主角东永裴以小时候尾指的拉钩约定为主线,多年后两人相遇,但真依却忘记了曾经的约定,在毫无预知的情况下,喜欢上永裴,和学校男女混合宿舍里的舍友建立了深厚的友谊,后来因为真依身世的曝光,两人被迫分开,事情真相大白后,有情人终成眷属。故事里所有的感情线都有完满的终点。
  • 桐语

    桐语

    怪力乱神由心起,魑魅魍魉任其中。桐语为君细分明
  • 无上破界

    无上破界

    我不甘平庸,偏要逆天而上,修成我的世界,我的世界我做主
  • 大争微世

    大争微世

    这是一个大争之世中夫唯不争的故事。不求荡气回肠只为追寻先秦风古。展现一曲慷慨壮怀的长乐之歌。剑侠的快意恩仇在尔虞我诈社会中恣意横流。让我们相信人生何处不逍遥。