登陆注册
4900000000105

第105章

It was ten the next morning at Cedar Crest, and Larry Brainard sat in his study mechanically going over his figures and plans for the Sherwood housing project.

For Larry the storms of the past few weeks, and the whirlwind of last night, had cleared away. There was quiet in the house, and through the open windows he could glimpse the broad lawn almost singing in its sun-gladdened greenness, and farther on he could glimpse the Sound gleaming placidly. Once for perhaps ten minutes he had seen the overalled and straw-hatted figure of Joe Ellison busy as usual among the flowers. He had strained his eyes for a glimpse of Maggie, but he had looked in vain.

Despite all that had come to pass at the Grantham the previous evening, Larry was just now feeling restless and rather forlorn. His breakfast had been brought to him in his room, and he had not seen a single member of last night's party at the Grantham since they had all divided up according to Miss Sherwood's orders and driven away; that is he had really seen no one except Dick.

Dick had gripped his hand when he had slipped in beside Dick in the low seat of the roadster. "You're all right, Captain Nemo!--only I'm going to be so brash as to call you Larry after this," Dick had said.

"If you'll let me, you and I are going to be buddies."

He was all right, Dick was. Dick Sherwood was a thoroughbred.

And there was another matter which had pleased him. The Duchess had called him up that morning, had congratulated him in terms so brief that they sounded perfunctory, but which Larry realized had all his grandmother's heart in them, and had said she wanted him to take over the care of all her houses--those she had put up as bail for him. When could he come in to see her about this? . . . He understood this dusty-seeming, stooped, inarticulate grandmother of his as he had not before. Considering what her life had been, she also was a brick.

But notwithstanding all this, Larry was lonely--hungrily lonely--and was very much in doubt. Miss Sherwood had spoken to him fair enough the night before--yet he really did not know just how he stood with her. And then--Maggie. That was what meant most to him just now. True, Maggie had emerged safe through perils without and within; and to get her through to some such safety as now was hers had been his chief concern these many months. He wanted to see her, to speak to her. But he did not know what her attitude toward him would now be. He did not know how to go about finding her. He was not even certain where she had spent the night. He wanted to see her, yet was apulse with fear of seeing her. She would not be hostile, he knew that much; but she might not love him; and at the best a meeting would be awkward, with so wide a gap in their lives to be bridged. . . .

He was brooding thus when there was a loud knocking at his door.

Without waiting for his invitation to enter, the door was flung open, and Hunt strode in leaving the door wide behind him. His face was just one great, excited grin. He gave Larry a thump upon the back, which almost knocked Larry over, and then pulled him back to equilibrium by seizing a hand in both of his, and then almost shook it off.

"Larry, my son," exploded the big painter, "I've just done it! And I did it just as you ordered me to! Forgot that Miss Sherwood and I had had a falling out, and as per your orders I walked straight up to her and asked her. And Larry, you son-of-a-gun, you were right! She said 'yes'!"

"You're lucky, old man!" exclaimed Larry, warmly returning the painter's grip.

"And, Larry, that's not all. You told me I had the clearness of vision of a cold boiled lobster--said I was the greatest fool that ever had brains enough not to paint with the wrong end of an umbrella. Paid me some little compliment like that."

"Something like that," Larry agreed.

"Well, Larry, old son, you were right again! I've been a worse fool than all you said. Been blinder than one of those varnished skulls some tough-stomached people use for paper-weights. After she'd said 'yes' she gave me the inside story of why we had fallen out. And guess why it was?"

"You don't want me to guess. You want to tell me. So go to it."

"Larry, we men will never know how clever women really are!" Hunt shook his head with impressive emphasis. "Nor how they understand our natures--the clever women--nor how well they know how to handle us.

She confessed that our quarrel was, on her part, carefully planned from the beginning with a definite result in view. She told me she'd always believed me a great painter, if I'd only break loose from the pretty things people wanted and paid me so much for. The trouble, as she saw it, was to get me to cut loose from so much easy money and devote myself entirely to real stuff. The only way she could see was for her to tell me I couldn't paint anything worth while, and tell it so straight-out as to make me believe that she believed it--and thus make me so mad that I'd chuck everything and go off to prove to her that I damned well could paint! I certainly got sore--I ducked out of sight, swearing I'd show her--and, oh, well, you know the rest! Tell me now, can you think of anything cleverer than the way she handled me?"

"It's just about what I would expect of Miss Sherwood," Larry commented.

"Excuse me," said a voice behind them. "I found the door open; may I come in?"

Both men turned quickly. Entering was Miss Sherwood.

"Isabel!" exclaimed the happy painter. "I was just telling Larry here--you know!"

Miss Sherwood's tone tried to be severe, and she tried not to smile--and she succeeded in being just herself.

同类推荐
  • 安广县乡土志

    安广县乡土志

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • One of Ours

    One of Ours

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 法华经持验记

    法华经持验记

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 玉镜新谭

    玉镜新谭

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 金璧故事

    金璧故事

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 萌宝当道:爹地,你老婆落跑了

    萌宝当道:爹地,你老婆落跑了

    “妈咪,你是不是不要我了……”“老婆,你是不是不要我了……”陆子烟表示,这辈子走过最长的路就是乔凫寒的套路。谁能告诉她,相亲遇到自家总裁,而且还买一送一该咋整?不仅喜提总裁老公一枚,还送乖巧可爱的萌宝一个……“爹地,有人说我是野种,还欺负妈咪!”“欺负你没事,欺负你妈咪事大,等着……于是,宠妻狂魔乔BOSS干净利落的干掉了那人公司。“乔凫寒,你是不是早就想对我欲行不轨了!”“老婆,上了贼船,下船就难了……”--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 人生不可不知的100个经典教训

    人生不可不知的100个经典教训

    人生没有不犯错的,可有些错是一次都不能犯的。一位妈妈恨铁不成钢,打了儿子一巴掌,不想把把儿子打成了植物人。有一名女记者,为了帮助男友戒毒,想用亲身体验说明毅力可以战胜自我,结果不但没有帮助男友戒掉毒瘾,自己也成了隐君子,抱恨终生。一位司机喝了一瓶白酒,带着几位好友兜风,结果撞上一辆大货车,车毁人亡……这些惨痛的教训给我们每个人都敲响了警钟。但一个人如果拒不接受教训在同一个地方跌到两次,或明知不可为而为之,恐怕上帝也帮不了他。
  • 湮时仙府

    湮时仙府

    等写到第五百章的时候才慢慢发布吧,这可能是本人第一本书也是最后一本,为自己圆一个写书的梦
  • 风中凌乱

    风中凌乱

    醉卧流云:“MM,上次跑的好快~”风凌乱:“—0—?”醉卧流云:“呵呵~老虎肉~”风凌乱:“厄……那个……”醉卧流云:“本来还想帮你刷……可是你跑的太快了……”
  • 网游之帝恨传说

    网游之帝恨传说

    新书《我的老婆是鬼尊》已经发布,—— 一把代表负面情绪的禁忌之剑,一段逆天封神之路,他是一名试验品,代号十三,拥有着超越人类的能力;他被外界称作死神撒旦……三年前,为了逃离组织,他和爱人坠落深渊,十死无生,可他却出现在了华夏帝都,失去了她,少年萎靡不振,直到三年后出现了一款超现实网游《幻世》,那里,竟然存在着她的消息!!!可是进入游戏以后,一切颠覆了少年的认知,错位的游戏世界,重叠的位面空间,一个巨大的阴谋正在围绕着他而展开。(欢迎加入醉轩盟,群号码68414274)
  • 直面人性:弗洛伊德传

    直面人性:弗洛伊德传

    弗洛伊德是奥地利心理学家、精神病医师、精神分析学派创始人。主要着作有《梦的解析》《精神分析引论》。美国心理学家T.H.黧黑认为他与达尔文和马克思是引领20世纪西方思潮的三位先知。他的思想对个体心理学之父阿德勒、分析心理学创始人荣格等心理学家都产生过影响。他是人性的发现者,也是精神分析的创立者,但在他一生大半的时光里,他的发现给他带来的却是漫天风雨般的攻击与辱骂;他毕生忠于爱情,但被人骂作淫棍;他忠于友谊,但他的朋友却一个个弃他而去;他是医生,但被癌症折磨得死去活来,先后动过数十次手术。《直面人性:弗洛伊德传》一书是北大哲学博士文聘元教授十年心血沉淀,他查阅了大量的资料,用优美流畅的语言展现出了弗洛伊德才华横溢、传奇多彩的一生以及伟大的学术历程。
  • 我们的不幸谁来承担

    我们的不幸谁来承担

    作家孔见以思想性书写为人们关注。《我们的不幸谁来承担》是他近年发表的人文随笔选粹,既有指向人本的探问,也有针对文本的诘究,对当今社会过度世俗化现象提出了质疑,体现了在尘埃厚积的地面上寻找闪光货币的价值诉求。孔见企图以一种叙述的方式来阐释事物,将哲思与诗情融会到一起,文气活泼洒脱,兴趣盎然,给人以阅读的愉快,区别于院墙内的学究。
  • 存在的瞬间:伍尔夫短篇小说集

    存在的瞬间:伍尔夫短篇小说集

    短篇小说集《存在的瞬间——伍尔夫短篇小说集》(原书名为《幽灵之屋及其他短篇小说》)是弗吉尼亚·伍尔夫自杀后,其夫伦纳德·伍尔夫为完成她的遗愿而精心编选的。书中收录了伍尔夫不同时期创作的18篇短篇小说,包括《墙上的斑点》《新裙子》《存在的瞬间》等。
  • 我被封了十万年

    我被封了十万年

    “破关当日,被五人追砍,丹田崩坏,修为殆尽,差一点当场去世,只记得那日阳光明媚,万里晴空,像极了我曹泥马呢,太虚仙帝。”——取自某帝日记摘要。
  • 挖坑需谨慎之炮灰的反抗

    挖坑需谨慎之炮灰的反抗

    【1V1快穿,第一个世界可跳过,更新慢,无逻辑,入坑是缘,欢迎吐槽。】 蔺青青是一名网文写手,平时最大的爱好就是在各个小说网站“流浪”,顺带挖坑,再一次挖了一堆坑不填,然后没然后了…… 挖坑太多总有遭报应的时候。 跟一本书签了契约,蔺青青从此背负上了填坑的巨大“债务”。—— 蔺青青:“坑儿,这个变态眼睛真好看。” 书灵失联当中。 蔺青青:“坑儿,金主爸爸眼睛真好看。” 书灵失联当中。 蔺青青:“坑儿,摄政王的眼睛真好看。” 书灵继续失联当中。 …… 好好的填坑任务突然变成了爱情攻略? 眼睛君一出现书灵又失联,蔺青青表示有点难搞。