登陆注册
4812300000055

第55章 FLORA(3)

"Well? . . . " Again a silence. "If you have fixed it up with the lady and gentleman present here for your board and lodging you had better say so. I don't want to interfere in a bargain I know nothing of. But I wonder how your father will take it when he comes out . . . or don't you expect him ever to come out?"At that moment, Mrs. Fyne told me she met the girl's eyes. There was that in them which made her shut her own. She also felt as though she would have liked to put her fingers in her ears. She restrained herself, however; and the "plain man" passed in his appalling versatility from sarcasm to veiled menace.

"You have--eh? Well and good. But before I go home let me ask you, my girl, to think if by any chance you throwing us over like this won't be rather bad for your father later on? Just think it over."He looked at his victim with an air of cunning mystery. She jumped up so suddenly that he started back. Mrs. Fyne rose too, and even the spell was removed from her husband. But the girl dropped again into the chair and turned her head to look at Mrs. Fyne. This time it was no accidental meeting of fugitive glances. It was a deliberate communication. To my question as to its nature Mrs. Fyne said she did not know. "Was it appealing?" I suggested. "No," she said. "Was it frightened, angry, crushed, resigned?" "No! No!

Nothing of these." But it had frightened her. She remembered it to this day. She had been ever since fancying she could detect the lingering reflection of that look in all the girl's glances. In the attentive, in the casual--even in the grateful glances--in the expression of the softest moods.

"Has she her soft moods, then?" I asked with interest.

Mrs Fyne, much moved by her recollections, heeded not my inquiry.

All her mental energy was concentrated on the nature of that memorable glance. The general tradition of mankind teaches us that glances occupy a considerable place in the self-expression of women.

Mrs. Fyne was trying honestly to give me some idea, as much perhaps to satisfy her own uneasiness as my curiosity. She was frowning in the effort as you see sometimes a child do (what is delightful in women is that they so often resemble intelligent children--I mean the crustiest, the sourest, the most battered of them do--at times).

She was frowning, I say, and I was beginning to smile faintly at her when all at once she came out with something totally unexpected.

"It was horribly merry," she said.

I suppose she must have been satisfied by my sudden gravity because she looked at me in a friendly manner.

"Yes, Mrs. Fyne," I said, smiling no longer. "I see. It would have been horrible even on the stage.""Ah!" she interrupted me--and I really believe her change of attitude back to folded arms was meant to check a shudder. "But it wasn't on the stage, and it was not with her lips that she laughed.""Yes. It must have been horrible," I assented. "And then she had to go away ultimately--I suppose. You didn't say anything?""No," said Mrs. Fyne. "I rang the bell and told one of the maids to go and bring the hat and coat out of the cab. And then we waited."I don't think that there ever was such waiting unless possibly in a jail at some moment or other on the morning of an execution. The servant appeared with the hat and coat, and then, still as on the morning of an execution, when the condemned, I believe, is offered a breakfast, Mrs. Fyne, anxious that the white-faced girl should swallow something warm (if she could) before leaving her house for an interminable drive through raw cold air in a damp four-wheeler--Mrs. Fyne broke the awful silence: "You really must try to eat something," in her best resolute manner. She turned to the "odious person" with the same determination. "Perhaps you will sit down and have a cup of coffee, too."The worthy "employer of labour" sat down. He might have been awed by Mrs. Fyne's peremptory manner--for she did not think of conciliating him then. He sat down, provisionally, like a man who finds himself much against his will in doubtful company. He accepted ungraciously the cup handed to him by Mrs. Fyne, took an unwilling sip or two and put it down as if there were some moral contamination in the coffee of these "swells." Between whiles he directed mysteriously inexpressive glances at little Fyne, who, Igather, had no breakfast that morning at all. Neither had the girl.

She never moved her hands from her lap till her appointed guardian got up, leaving his cup half full.

"Well. If you don't mean to take advantage of this lady's kind offer I may just as well take you home at once. I want to begin my day--I do."After a few more dumb, leaden-footed minutes while Flora was putting on her hat and jacket, the Fynes without moving, without saying anything, saw these two leave the room.

"She never looked back at us," said Mrs. Fyne. "She just followed him out. I've never had such a crushing impression of the miserable dependence of girls--of women. This was an extreme case. But a young man--any man--could have gone to break stones on the roads or something of that kind--or enlisted--or--"It was very true. Women can't go forth on the high roads and by-ways to pick up a living even when dignity, independence, or existence itself are at stake. But what made me interrupt Mrs.

Fyne's tirade was my profound surprise at the fact of that respectable citizen being so willing to keep in his home the poor girl for whom it seemed there was no place in the world. And not only willing but anxious. I couldn't credit him with generous impulses. For it seemed obvious to me from what I had learned that, to put it mildly, he was not an impulsive person.

"I confess that I can't understand his motive," I exclaimed.

"This is exactly what John wondered at, at first," said Mrs. Fyne.

By that time an intimacy--if not exactly confidence--had sprung up between us which permitted her in this discussion to refer to her husband as John. "You know he had not opened his lips all that time," she pursued. "I don't blame his restraint. On the contrary.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    青涩蜕变,如今她是能独当一面的女boss,爱了冷泽聿七年,也同样花了七年时间去忘记他。以为是陌路,他突然向他表白,扬言要娶她,她只当他是脑子抽风,他的殷勤她也全都无视。他帮她查她父母的死因,赶走身边情敌,解释当初拒绝她的告别,和故意对她冷漠都是无奈之举。突然爆出她父母的死居然和冷家有丝毫联系,还莫名跳出个公爵未婚夫,扬言要与她履行婚约。峰回路转,破镜还能重圆吗? PS:我又开新文了,每逢假期必书荒,新文《有你的世界遇到爱》,喜欢我的文的朋友可以来看看,这是重生类现言,对这个题材感兴趣的一定要收藏起来。
  • 一个教练

    一个教练

    “成为一个顶级教练的资格是什么?”“冠军。”“那能评价一下李云吗?”“一个非常成功的顶级教练,仅次于我。”“那能评价下您至今未赢过……”“我拒绝回答这个问题。”穆里尼奥非常不爽地说道。
  • 陆长风

    陆长风

    穿越二十载,一事无成,绑定最强外卖系统,咸鱼翻身。
  • 星辰战神

    星辰战神

    星夜大陆,实力为尊!修星法,炼神通!天外来者,弃婴南颜,天赋异禀,天生比常人多一个逆天的本命星辰,星辰沟通,命运逆转。万族争霸,星夜乱世!他将君临天下,星法逆动乾坤,成就星辰战神!
  • 七里樱

    七里樱

    年少时,我们,似乎成为了世界的主角,遗憾过,苦恼过,伤心心过,但庆幸的是在那个即将逝去的青春里,你世界的男主随着四季辗转在你身旁,陪你笑,陪你哭……终有一天,你发现他只是喜欢你身边的那个人而已…“你知道的,我喜欢她哎。”“没事…”至少我的青春,你来过就好。
  • 怪物

    怪物

    过下午三点钟的时候,又开始刮风。灰尘扑头盖脑地朝脸上扑过来,风镜上很快糊了厚厚一层,视线几乎完全被阻挡。风刚起来的时候,检测器便发出了呜呜的哀鸣,李诺和唐勇飞快地将铁锨扛在肩上,转身就往院子里冲。即便如此,还是很快就被灰尘遮挡了视线,眼前一片模糊,只能依靠检测器的鸣叫辨别方向。灰尘如雨般落在身上,随着呼吸进入肺部。李诺抓起氧气罩罩在脸上,一边咳嗽,一边拽着唐勇。
  • BOSS狂想曲

    BOSS狂想曲

    如果有人问:网游是什么?孩子会说:就是网络游戏。青年会说:偶尔打发时间的消遣。父母会说:就是害我儿子考试不及格的东西。警察会说:真人PK的进化版本。商人会说:那都是钱。子于会说:那是工作。对,只是工作!在这个外挂四溢、RMB战士横飞的时代,网络游戏早就没了乐趣可言。对他们这些长年与网游为伴的职业玩家来说,网游的乐趣到底在哪里呢?情节虚构,切勿模仿。
  • 打工魔王事件簿

    打工魔王事件簿

    他是弑杀神明的王者。他是统御万民的霸者。他是支配世间的魔王。“魔王大人今天又去打工了呢。”“屁话,魔王的事能叫打工吗?”————————“嘁,不就是普通的穿越文吗?简介搞这么高端想表达什么?”“看不懂吗?那就去看书啊!”总而言之,就是讲述一位弑神者在各种副本世界中吊打一切的故事。
  • 宿主你别秀了

    宿主你别秀了

    许愿本是一个普通少女,奈何某一天出门被雷劈死了,然后绑定了系统二狗,可是二狗发现许愿每个世界都在和帅气的小哥哥撒狗粮秀恩爱,成吨的那种。二狗表示他要踢翻这碗狗粮,宿主你别秀了,单身的二狗伤不起。【本文小白苏炸天,可能有狗血,慎入】
  • 极宠,田园小妇

    极宠,田园小妇

    傻傻的穿了,肉身是个傻妞,怎么办?难道我还要继续装傻?哈哈,当然要活的滋润,谁惹我就把谁往死里整。我天真,我烂漫,还要随时扑倒我的俊美相公!片段一:“相公,她们说我是败家娘们!”某女端着小篮子,一边吃一边看着在那采茶的相公。“别听她们胡说,我的宝儿最好了。”某男俊逸一笑,轻轻替她擦了擦嘴角。“相公,她们说要是嫁了你这样的男人,累死了都甘心。”某女继续絮叨“恩?为什么累死?”某男皱了皱眉。“应该是在床上累死吧”,某女大言不惭。一群乌鸦飞过、、、、、、、、片段二:相公也是腹黑的主“宝儿,去帮我把盆端来”某女颠颠的去了“宝儿,再去把我在灶房的书拿来”某女继续奔波“宝儿,再去给我把晾好的茶叶拿来”某女拿来后,满头大汗。“相公,我好热,可不可以不要再去拿东西了?”某女委屈的鼓着腮帮。“那好,过来,为夫给你洗澡。”某男腹黑的把人拉了过来。、、、、、、、、