登陆注册
4132900000045

第45章 SYLVIA OF THE LETTERS.(1)

Old Ab Herrick, so most people called him. Not that he was actually old; the term was an expression of liking rather than any reflection on his years. He lived in an old-fashioned house--old-fashioned, that is, for New York--on the south side of West Twentieth Street: once upon a time, but that was long ago, quite a fashionable quarter. The house, together with Mrs. Travers, had been left him by a maiden aunt. An "apartment" would, of course, have been more suitable to a bachelor of simple habits, but the situation was convenient from a journalistic point of view, and for fifteen years Abner Herrick had lived and worked there.

Then one evening, after a three days' absence, Abner Herrick returned to West Twentieth Street, bringing with him a little girl wrapped up in a shawl, and a wooden box tied with a piece of cord.

He put the box on the table; and the young lady, loosening her shawl, walked to the window and sat down facing the room.

Mrs. Travers took the box off the table and put it on the floor--it was quite a little box--and waited.

"This young lady," explained Abner Herrick, "is Miss Ann Kavanagh, daughter of--of an old friend of mine."

"Oh!" said Mrs. Travers, and remained still expectant.

"Miss Kavanagh," continued Abner Herrick, "will be staying with us for--" He appeared to be uncertain of the length of Miss Kavanagh's visit. He left the sentence unfinished and took refuge in more pressing questions.

"What about the bedroom on the second floor? Is it ready? Sheets aired--all that sort of thing?"

"It can be," replied Mrs. Travers. The tone was suggestive of judgment reserved.

"I think, if you don't mind, Mrs. Travers, that we'd like to go to bed as soon as possible." From force of habit Abner S. Herrick in speaking employed as a rule the editorial "we." "We have been travelling all day and we are very tired. To-morrow morning--"

"I'd like some supper," said Miss Kavanagh from her seat in the window, without moving.

"Of course," agreed Miss Kavanagh's host, with a feeble pretence that the subject had been on the tip of his tongue. As a matter of fact, he really had forgotten all about it. "We might have it up here while the room is being got ready. Perhaps a little--"

"A soft boiled egg and a glass of milk, if you please, Mrs.

Travers," interrupted Miss Kavanagh, still from her seat at the window.

"I'll see about it," said Mrs. Travers, and went out, taking the quite small box with her.

Such was the coming into this story of Ann Kavanagh at the age of eight years; or, as Miss Kavanagh herself would have explained, had the question been put to her, eight years and seven months, for Ann Kavanagh was a precise young lady. She was not beautiful--not then.

She was much too sharp featured; the little pointed chin protruding into space to quite a dangerous extent. Her large dark eyes were her one redeeming feature. But the level brows above them were much too ready with their frown. A sallow complexion and nondescript hair deprived her of that charm of colouring on which youth can generally depend for attraction, whatever its faults of form. Nor could it truthfully be said that sweetness of disposition afforded compensation.

"A self-willed, cantankerous little imp I call her," was Mrs.

Travers's comment, expressed after one of the many trials of strength between them, from which Miss Kavanagh had as usual emerged triumphant.

"It's her father," explained Abner Herrick, feeling himself unable to contradict.

"It's unfortunate," answered Mrs. Travers, "whatever it is."

To Uncle Ab himself, as she had come to call him, she could on occasion be yielding and affectionate; but that, as Mrs. Travers took care to point out to her, was a small thing to her credit.

"If you had the instincts of an ordinary Christian child," explained Mrs. Travers to her, "you'd be thinking twenty-four hours a day of what you could do to repay him for all his loving kindness to you; instead of causing him, as you know you do, a dozen heartaches in a week. You're an ungrateful little monkey, and when he's gone you'll--"

Upon which Miss Kavanagh, not waiting to hear more, flew upstairs and, locking herself in her own room, gave herself up to howling and remorse; but was careful not to emerge until she felt bad tempered again; and able, should opportunity present itself, to renew the contest with Mrs. Travers unhampered by sentiment.

But Mrs. Travers's words had sunk in deeper than that good lady herself had hoped for; and one evening, when Abner Herrick was seated at his desk penning a scathing indictment of the President for lack of firmness and decision on the tariff question, Ann, putting her thin arms round his neck and rubbing her little sallow face against his right-hand whisker, took him to task on the subject.

"You're not bringing me up properly--not as you ought to," explained Ann. "You give way to me too much, and you never scold me."

"Not scold you!" exclaimed Abner with a certain warmth of indignation. "Why, I'm doing it all--"

"Not what _I_ call scolding," continued Ann. "It's very wrong of you. I shall grow up horrid if you don't help me."

As Ann with great clearness pointed out to him, there was no one else to undertake the job with any chance of success. If Abner failed her, then she supposed there was no hope for her: she would end by becoming a wicked woman, and everybody, including herself, would hate her. It was a sad prospect. The contemplation of it brought tears to Ann's eyes.

He saw the justice of her complaint and promised to turn over a new leaf. He honestly meant to do so; but, like many another repentant sinner, found himself feeble before the difficulties of performance.

He might have succeeded better had it not been for her soft deep eyes beneath her level brows.

"You're not much like your mother," so he explained to her one day, "except about the eyes. Looking into your eyes I can almost see your mother."

同类推荐
  • 俗说

    俗说

    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。
  • 观音义疏记

    观音义疏记

    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。
  • 杜甫集

    杜甫集

    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 Lost Princess of Oz

    The Lost Princess of Oz

    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。
  • 两粤梦游记

    两粤梦游记

    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。
热门推荐
  • 佛说鹿母经

    佛说鹿母经

    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。
  • 佛说海八德经

    佛说海八德经

    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。
  • 全球性博弈

    全球性博弈

    本书以人性讨论为基准,分别研究了中国以及国际社会中的典型国家,重点分析了大量时代性问题,使读者对中国有了一个更加全面的认识;也让读者对全球化的本质有了非常深刻的认识和理解。作者以人性的讨论开篇,给全书奠定了一个哲学伦理的基调。在这种基调的基础上对中国和国际进行了全方面的透彻解读。中国篇中,作者针对中国国情,详细深入地剖析了中国的政治制度,经济科技,文化体育等等诸多问题,在未来,现在,过去三种层次的透视中给读者展现了一个更加全面真实的中国。国际篇中,作者详细讲述了美、日、俄、新、韩、印等国,对各国的政治制度和基本国情进行了全面深入地挖掘和阐述,生动形象地展示了全球化的过程。
  • 华庭叙

    华庭叙

    世人皆知淮安侯云见“好男色”,似乎还有爬过龙床之嫌,却没人知晓,断袖侯爷是个女侯爷。肩负家族命运的她,不得不女扮男装,在官场中小心翼翼。云见虽看似风流,其实却很专情,对风月场所的男头牌封笑离一见钟情。可谁知刚把人请到家,家中却遭遇刺客,封笑离为保护她丢了性命。待云见走出阴霾后,决定遵照封笑离的嘱托照顾好他的弟弟封无涯。但紧接着,她又遇到了新麻烦。之前,她独自外出时遇到刺客,一名妖艳男子曾救了她,但也缠上了她。金钱打发不走,又扬言对她一见钟情,甘愿在她身边保护她。而此男子的出现也彻底改变了云见的命运。
  • 豪门生存手记

    豪门生存手记

    为继承巨富家产,娘家人暗中欲置她于死地;为争夺世子袭位,夫家人明里视她为眼中钉;不欲成为家族棋子的夫君,与她貌合神离,渐行渐远。道道险关,步步惊心,她要怎么破,如何解,才能自保,才能和他偕老。
  • 流浪地球之随机连线

    流浪地球之随机连线

    2175年因为太阳急速老化即将毁灭,太阳系不再适合人类生存,于是人类开启“流浪地球”计划,试图带领地球一起逃离太阳系。……刘彻一名默默无名B站up主,他平时最喜欢玩P社游戏,某天他正在直播《群星》,却突然获得直播系统。正当他欣喜若狂,以为自己即将开始主角人生,迎娶白富美的时候,他却突然穿越了…………看着眼前熟悉的场景,听到耳畔回荡着巨大的轰鸣声,刘彻意思到自己穿越到了电影《流浪地球》的世界。明白一切的刘彻,此刻心中有三个字,不知道当不当讲,末世他要这直播系统有何用?明明应该登上人生巅峰,可是现在却变成了鸡肋的外挂,刘彻只觉得心累,直到有一天他却忽然发现,似乎这个世界和电影中的《流浪地球》,世界似乎因为他一只蝴蝶,发生了很大变化……
  • 神域天君

    神域天君

    推荐好友小说《宁可负天下不可负毕之》天下之大,无奇不有。浩瀚离愁,百怪莫测。世界大千,英豪无数。群雄林立,再现辉煌。一条木,两条木,万物生灵由此林。一重山,两重山,多变风蹙自此出!大千世界风云变,实力为尊镇天下。问苍茫大地,谁主沉浮?数风流人物,还看今朝!
  • 因为相信你

    因为相信你

    张倩一直以为爱情就是以我心换你心,又怎么会知道爱情也会是真心换伤心!“我是真的爱你,但是……但是我也爱她,”杜志江说,“你能骗我一次又一次是因为我爱你!相信你!从今天起,你的爱我不要了,我的爱你也没资格……”她挺直脊背离开,没人看到地上碎成花的泪滴……
  • 快穿炮灰翻身

    快穿炮灰翻身

    大家好,我是杜冰凌。想我一金丹修士,活了这么多年没死在妖兽爪下,没死在上古遗迹探索与敌人斗法过程中,却死在好友插刀、闺蜜背叛之下……唔,我以为我已经很惨了,没想到惨中更有惨中人!这些小世界的炮灰们,真真是……惨的没眼看。还好,我来了,我替炮灰来代言。小炮灰们,准备好要大力掀桌了嘛?嚯嚯嚯……走起!
  • 尘世背包客

    尘世背包客

    从我们最初的成长,长到我们最后的时光,我们有很多后悔的事情,可是也有从未后悔的决定!