登陆注册
4708000000019

第19章

Schuyler Clinton took this view of the case, and made little attempt to conceal her opinion. She was justly indignant at her cousin's gross worldliness, and possible promotion in rank.

"If Madeleine Ross marries that coarse, horrid old Illinois politician," said she to her husband, "I never will forgive her so long as I live."

Mr. Clinton tried to excuse Madeleine, and even went so far as to suggest that the difference of age was no greater than in their own case; but his wife trampled ruthlessly on his argument.

"At any rate," said she, "I never came to Washington as a widow on purpose to set my cap for the first candidate for the Presidency, and I never made a public spectacle of my indecent eagerness in the very galleries of the Senate; and Mrs. Lee ought to be ashamed of herself. She is a cold-blooded, heartless, unfeminine cat."

Little Victoria Dare, who babbled like the winds and streams, with utter indifference as to what she said or whom she addressed, used to bring choice bits of this gossip to Mrs. Lee. She always affected a little stammer when she said anything uncommonly impudent, and put on a manner of languid simplicity. She felt keenly the satisfaction of seeing Madeleine charged with her own besetting sins. For years all Washington had agreed that Victoria was little better than one of the wicked; she had done nothing but violate every rule of propriety and scandalise every well-regulated family in the city, and there was no good in her. Yet it could not be denied that Victoria was amusing, and had a sort of irregular fascination; consequently she was universally tolerated. To see Mrs. Lee thrust down to her own level was an unmixed pleasure to her, and she carefully repeated to Madeleine the choice bits of dialogue which she picked up in her wanderings.

"Your cousin, Mrs. Clinton, says you are a ca-ca-cat, Mrs. Lee."

"I don't believe it, Victoria. Mrs. Clinton never said anything of the sort."

"Mrs. Marston says it is because you have caught a ra-ra-rat, and Senator Clinton was only a m-m-mouse!"

Naturally all this unexpected publicity irritated Mrs. Lee not a little, especially when short and vague paragraphs, soon followed by longer and more positive ones, in regard to Senator Ratcliffe's matrimonial prospects, began to appear in newspapers, along with descriptions of herself from the pens of enterprising female correspondents for the press, who had never so much as seen her.

At the first sight of one of these newspaper articles, Madeleine fairly cried with mortification and anger. She wanted to leave Washington the next day, and she hated the very thought of Ratcliffe. There was something in the newspaper style so inscrutably vulgar, something so inexplicably revolting to the sense of feminine decency, that she shrank under it as though it were a poisonous spider. But after the first acute shame had passed, her temper was roused, and she vowed that she would pursue her own path just as she had begun, without regard to all the malignity and vulgarity in the wide United States. She did not care to marry Senator Ratcliffe; she liked his society and was flattered by his confidence; she rather hoped to prevent him from ever making a formal offer, and if not, she would at least push it off to the last possible moment; but she was not to be frightened from marrying him by any amount of spitefulness or gossip, and she did not mean to refuse him except for stronger reasons than these. She even went so far in her desperate courage as to laugh at her cousin, Mrs.

Clinton, whose venerable husband she allowed and even encouraged to pay her such public attention and to express sentiments of such youthful ardour as she well knew would inflame and exasperate the excellent lady his wife.

Carrington was the person most unpleasantly affected by the course which this affair had taken. He could no longer conceal from himself the fact that he was as much m love as a dignified Virginian could be. With him, at all events, she had shown no coquetry, nor had she ever either flattered or encouraged him. But Carrington, m his solitary struggle against fate, had found her a warm friend; always ready to assist where assistance was needed, generous with her money in any cause which he was willing to vouch for, full of sympathy where sympathy was more than money, and full of resource and suggestion where money and sympathy failed. Carrington knew her better than she knew herself.

He selected her books; he brought the last speech or the last report from the Capitol or the departments; he knew her doubts and her vagaries, and as far as he understood them at all, helped her to solve them.

Carrington was too modest, and perhaps too shy, to act the part of a declared lover, and he was too proud to let it be thought that he wanted to exchange his poverty for her wealth. But he was all the more anxious when he saw the evident attraction which Ratcliffe's strong will and unscrupulous energy exercised over her. He saw that Ratcliffe was steadily pushing his advances; that he flattered all Mrs. Lee's weaknesses by the confidence and deference with which he treated her; and that in a very short time, Madeleine must either marry him or find herself looked upon as a heartless coquette. He had his own reasons for thinking ill of Senator Ratcliffe, and he meant to prevent a marriage; but he had an enemy to deal with not easily driven from the path, and quite capable of routing any number of rivals.

Ratcliffe was afraid of no one. He had not fought his own way in life for nothing, and he knew all the value of a cold head and dogged self-assurance.

Nothing but this robust Americanism and his strong will carried him safely through the snares and pitfalls of Mrs. Lee's society, where rivals and enemies beset him on every hand. He was little better than a schoolboy, when he ventured on their ground, but when he could draw them over upon his own territory of practical life he rarely failed to trample on his assailants.

同类推荐
  • 慎柔五书

    慎柔五书

    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。
  • 孔子诗论

    孔子诗论

    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。
  • 释门自镜录

    释门自镜录

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 费隐禅师语录

    费隐禅师语录

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 蓱沙王五愿经

    蓱沙王五愿经

    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
  • 难四

    难四

    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。
  • 系统的力量:基业长青的秘密

    系统的力量:基业长青的秘密

    经营企业就是经营系统。如何将它嵌入商业环境这部大机器,和相关企业环环相扣,带动大系统的运转?同时构建自己相对独立、良性运转的小系统?海水的威力绝对不等于无数水滴的合力,而是这些合力的几何倍数。企业系统所爆发出的威力同样比敏锐的商业嗅觉、合理的整体布局、有效的具体运营等综合实力强大数倍。如果你的企业已经发力到这种境界,那么恭喜你拥有了撬动巨头的能量。假使你还在为企业的商机选择、文化氛围营造、商业模式设计、资金来源、营销策略、组织架构等烦恼,同样恭喜你,选择这本书,聆听亚洲商业模式首席专家林伟贤的运筹帷幄之道,你的企业能量通过系统的整合将得以彰显。
  • 佳妻来袭:刺青师的腹黑老公

    佳妻来袭:刺青师的腹黑老公

    订婚的那天她在酒店看到自己的男朋友和堂姐在一起,呵呵,这场订婚典礼也不用举办了。但是随后而来居然被个腹黑高贵的男人当做碰瓷的,她拿着那张支票在风中凌乱了……是在逗她笑吗?她寒兮兮长得这么像碰瓷的!最最要命的是居然在闺蜜家看到了那个男人……救命啊!
  • 柳仙宫

    柳仙宫

    出生于一座平凡山村的柳杨,体内流淌着天界罪奴之血。入阴谋局势,他一路畅通无阻;凭魔体资质,他道法高歌猛进;借漫天战火,他统御十方英豪……天庭来使斥道:柳氏罪奴,速叩首领旨!柳杨闻言哂笑:正要喝酒,需借阁下人头一用……
  • 做女人要内心强大

    做女人要内心强大

    这是一本帮助女性朋友修炼内心的智慧读本。本书从“如何让内心变得强大”出发,以通俗的语言、犀利深入的分析,将心理学、社会学等常识融入现实生活,分析我们在职场、人际、两性等各种社会关系中的心理状态,教会读者如何应对险恶的世界、控制情绪、发掘潜能,修一颗强大的内心,在各种险恶面前笑得云淡风轻,走得自信有力。
  • 庶斋老学丛谈

    庶斋老学丛谈

    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。
  • 妒记

    妒记

    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。
  • 了不起的盖茨比

    了不起的盖茨比

    一次偶然的机会,穷职员尼克闯入了挥金如土的大富翁盖茨比隐秘的世界,尼克惊讶地发现,盖茨比内心惟一的牵绊竟是河对岸那盏小小的绿灯--灯影婆娑中,住着心爱的旧情人黛熙。盖茨比曾因贫穷而失去了黛熙,为了找回爱情,他不择一切手段成为有钱人,建起豪宅,只是想让昔日情人来小坐片刻。然而,冰冷的现实容不下缥缈的梦,真正的悲剧却在此时悄悄启幕……《了不起的盖茨比》是世界文学史上“完美之书”,村上春树,海明威,塞林格疯狂迷恋。
  • 步步生莲之妖妃来袭

    步步生莲之妖妃来袭

    特工任务失败,不料穿越异界南疆,又被送入皇宫,凭借着妖孽的智慧和眉毛,她在皇宫虽然步步惊心,却是慢慢崛起!【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 曹多勇小说二题

    曹多勇小说二题

    他们有时候谈起这个,主要是和他们的邻居哈里特和吉姆·斯通的生活作比较。在米勒两口子看来,斯通家的日子更充实,更有希望。——雷蒙德·卡佛。《邻居》邻居家两口子吵架了。关门闭窗,吵架声细细弱弱、沉沉闷闷地传过来,时高时低,时紧时密,有孩子的哭叫声,有女人的谩骂声。妻子断言说,看来这家夫妻俩距离婚不远了。我说,夫妻吵架跟离婚是两回事,有的夫妻一次架不吵,照样离婚;有的夫妻经常吵架,照样不离婚。这种夫妻叫“丁当夫妻”,一天不丁当,一天不吵架,日子往下过得就不顺畅。吵架是他们解决生活矛盾的唯一方式。