登陆注册
5453400000067

第67章

I'm too proud for that sort of thing.Oh,what a rotten world this is!"she cried passionately,and burst into a storm of weeping.It was the most natural action of her life.

Jonah sat and stared at the lights of the Quay,dismayed by her tears but relieved in his mind.He had spoken at last;already he was framing fresh arguments to persuade her.Presently she dried her eyes and looked at him with the ghost of a smile.Then began a discussion which threatened to last all night,neither of them giving way from the position they had taken up,neither yielding an inch to the other's entreaties.Suddenly Jonah looked at his watch with an exclamation.It was nearly ten.In the heat of argument they had forgotten the lapse of time.They scrambled over boulders and through the lantana bushes down to the path,and just caught the boat.

When they reached the Quay they were surprised again by the splendour of the night.The moon,just past the full,flooded the streets with white light that left deep shadows between the buildings like a charcoal drawing.

They took a tram to the Haymarket,as they were afraid of being recognized in the Waterloo cars,and reached Regent Street after eleven.The hotels had disgorged their customers,who were talking loudly in groups on the footpath or lurching homeward with uneven steps.Jonah was explaining that he must see Clara all the way home on account of the lateness of the hour,when he was astonished to hear someone sobbing in the monumental mason's yard as if his heart would break.He turned and looked.The headstones and white marble crosses stood in rows with a faint resemblance to a graveyard;the moonlight fell clear and cold on these monuments awaiting a purchaser.Some,already sold,were lettered in black with the name of the departed.Jonah and Clara stared,puzzled by the noise,when they saw an old man in the rear of the yard in a top hat and a frock coat,clinging to a marble cross.He lurched round,and instantly Clara,with a gasp of amazement and shame,recognized her father.

She moved into the shadows of a house,humiliated to her soul by this exhibition;but Jonah laughed,in spite of himself,at the figure cut by Dad among the ready-made monuments.As he laughed,Dad caught sight of him,and clinging to a marble angel with one arm for support,beckoned wildly with the other.

"Come here--come here,"he cried between his sobs."I'm all alone with the dead,and nobody to shed a tear 'cep'meself.Shame on you,shame on you,"he cried,raising his voice in bitter grief,"to pass the poor fellows in their graves without sheddin'tear!"He stopped and stared with drunken gravity at the name on the nearest tombstone,trying to read the words which danced before his eyes in the clear light.Jonah saw them plainly.

SACRED TO THE MEMORY OF

SARAH JAMES,Aged Eighty-five.

A fresh burst of grief announced that Dad had deciphered the lettering.

"Sam!"he cried bitterly."Me old fren'Sam!To think of bringing him here without letting me know!The besh fren'I ever had."Here sobs choked his utterance.He stooped and examined the shining marble slab again,lurching from one side to the other with incessant motion.

"An'not a flowersh onsh grave!"he cried."Sam was awf'ly fond flowersh.""Get away 'ome,or the Johns'll pinch yer,"said Jonah.

Dad stopped and stared at him with a glimmering of reason in his fuddled brain.

"I know yoush,"he cried,with a cunning leer."An'I know your fren'there.She isn't yer missis.She never is,y'know.Naughty boy!"he cried,wagging his finger at Jonah;"but I wont split on pal."That reminded him of the deceased Sam,and he turned again to the monument.

"Goo'bye,Sam,"he cried suddenly,under the impression that he had been to a funeral."I've paid me respecks to an ol'fren',an'now we'll both sleep in peace.""Come away and leave him,"whispered Clara,trembling with disgust and mortification.

"No fear!"said Jonah."The Johns down 'ere don't know 'im,an'they'll lumber 'im.You walk on ahead,an'I'll steer 'im 'ome."He looked round;there was not a cab to be seen.

He led Dad out of the stonemason's yard with difficulty,as he wanted to wait for the mourning coaches.Then,opposite the mortuary,he remembered his little present for the Duchess,and insisted on going back.

"Wheresh my lil'present for Duchess?"he wailed."Can't go 'ome without lil'present."Jonah was in despair.At last he rolled his handkerchief into a ball and thrust it into Dad's hand.

Then Dad,relieved and happy,cast Jonah off,and stood for a moment like the Leaning Tower of Pisa.Jonah watched anxiously,expecting him to fall,but all at once,with a forward lurch Dad broke into a run,safe on his feet as a spinning top.Jonah had forgotten Dad's run,famous throughout all Waterloo,Redfern,and Alexandria.

A FATAL ACCIDENT

As Clara crossed the tunnel at Cleveland Street,she found that she had a few minutes to spare,and stopped to admire the Silver Shoe from the opposite footpath.Triumphant and colossal,treading the air securely above the shop,the glittering shoe dominated the street with the insolence of success.More than once it had figured in her dreams,endowed with the fantastic powers of Aaron's rod,swallowing its rivals at a gulp or slowly crushing the life out of the bruised limbs.

Her eye travelled to the shop below,with its huge plate-glass windows framed in brass,packed with boots set at every angle to catch the eye.

The array of shining brass rods and glass stands,the gaudy ticket on each pair of boots with the shillings marked in enormous red figures and the pence faintly outlined beside them,pleased her eye like a picture.

同类推荐
  • Derrick Vaughan--Novelist

    Derrick Vaughan--Novelist

    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。
  • 鸣机夜课图记

    鸣机夜课图记

    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。
  • 吴耿尚孔四王全传

    吴耿尚孔四王全传

    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。
  • THE RED BADGE OF COURAGE

    THE RED BADGE OF COURAGE

    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。
  • 六门陀罗尼经

    六门陀罗尼经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 廉少专宠:情陷迷糊小甜妻

    廉少专宠:情陷迷糊小甜妻

    情窦初开时,廉敬修就反复做一个梦,梦里,她笑起来灿烂如花,哭起来梨花带雨,活脱脱的小仙女。十年后重逢,才发现,这哪是什么仙女,分明就是蠢萌小逗比。不过,有什么关系,种下情蛊,这辈子非她不娶。
  • 墨剑诀

    墨剑诀

    卷一:身怀传世玉佩,却连遭家族横祸,从孤儿到大败倭人的流浪者,从家族显威的武士到为国为家的英雄。卷二:最有钱的大小姐和最穷的小乞丐将会擦出怎样的火花?
  • 何惜百

    何惜百

    倒春寒来雪满地,今朝顾窗玉化情。春若借柳三分绿,根土还春绿绦新。狂风骤雨亦拘束,自是土沃根固深。
  • 衡中那一年

    衡中那一年

    揭秘传说中的超级中学,解锁一段刻骨的励志往事,回忆一段难忘的峥嵘岁月。这是真正的青春拼搏,这是真实的衡中生活……
  • Kwaidan

    Kwaidan

    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。
  • 替身新娘

    替身新娘

    暗夜里,沉寂中可以听见水珠落在地板上的细微声响,滴答滴答,如同死神那轻微的脚步声。风卷起了厚重的窗帘,带来一阵清晰的空气,也吹来了夹杂在空气里那淡淡的血腥味。“为什么?”声音断续着,角落里,蜷缩的男人如同被汽车碾压过的破烂娃娃,微弱的气息下让人感觉到他离死神愈加的近了。“为什么要杀我?”喘息着,从苍白而干涸的嘴角里终于吐露出一句完整的话。一滴一滴的鲜血由他的双手双脚,慢……
  • 老公别再惩罚我

    老公别再惩罚我

    龚渺二十八岁之前相信她会穿越,也不会相信她会嫁一个比她小六岁的男人!鸡腿!好肥好大的鸡腿!“啪!”的一声梦醒了,她迷迷糊糊的睁开眼。“渺渺,你爸爸在枕头下面放了把刀,他想半夜杀死我!”六岁的渺渺,并不明白,妈妈眼里的紧张害怕是什么,死对于一个还纯洁的生命来说是陌生的!她看了一下那个让妈妈害怕的东西,是一个工地上专用的弹簧刀,锈……
  • 挂匾

    挂匾

    穿越历史的雾霭,秦长城两侧,萧关古道旁,奔走的是犬戎、西羌、义渠、乌氏、鲜卑、匈奴、党项、蒙古、回回的民众,不同的行装,不同的语言,上演着一幕幕历史的活剧。
  • Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam

    Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam

    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。
  • 盛世惊凰:嫡女皇妃要逆天

    盛世惊凰:嫡女皇妃要逆天

    “你的存在就是我的耻辱!”南宫景不明白身为兵部尚书府的当家主母为什么这么容不下她这个庶女,还没来得及问清楚原因就一命呜呼。南宫景也没想到她这个不明不白的冤魂连阎王都不收,转一圈居然又回到到了兵部尚书府,只不过,岁月倒流在了她十二岁那年。南宫景是兵部尚书府庶女,却被当家主母各种嫌弃最后用一张手绢亲手送她归西。重生之后才明白,从头到尾就是一个阴谋。上天给了她机会将一切疑团慢慢解开……情节虚构,请勿模仿--情节虚构,请勿模仿