登陆注册
5259200000025

第25章 II. SHE DRAWS CLOSE AND SATISFIES(2)

However, before he rose she grew friendly to some degree, and when he left, just after the arrival of three opportune young ladies she seemed regretful. She asked him to come again; and he thought he would tell the truth. 'No: I shall not care to come again,' he answered, in a tone inaudible to the young ladies.

She followed him to the door. 'What an uncivil thing to say!' she murmured in surprise.

'It is rather uncivil. Good-bye,' said Pierston.

As a punishment she did not ring the bell, but left him to find his way out as he could. 'Now what the devil this means I cannot tell,' he said to himself, reflecting stock-still for a moment on the stairs.

And yet the meaning was staring him in the face.

Meanwhile one of the three young ladies had said, 'What interesting man was that, with his lovely head of hair? I saw him at Lady Channelcliffe's the other night.'

'Jocelyn Pierston.'

'O, Nichola, that IS too bad! To let him go in that shabby way, when I would have given anything to know him! I have wanted to know him ever since I found out how much his experiences had dictated his statuary, and I discovered them by seeing in a Jersey paper of the marriage of a person supposed to be his wife, who ran off with him many years ago, don't you know, and then wouldn't marry him, in obedience to some novel social principles she had invented for herself.'

'O! didn't he marry her?' said Mrs. Pine-Avon, with a start. 'Why, I heard only yesterday that he did, though they have lived apart ever since.'

'Quite a mistake,' said the young lady. 'How I wish I could run after him!'

But Jocelyn was receding from the pretty widow's house with long strides. He went out very little during the next few days, but about a week later he kept an engagement to dine with Lady Iris Speedwell, whom he never neglected, because she was the brightest hostess in London.

By some accident he arrived rather early. Lady Iris had left the drawing-room for a moment to see that all was right in the dining-room, and when he was shown in there stood alone in the lamplight Nichola Pine-Avon. She had been the first arrival. He had not in the least expected to meet her there, further than that, in a general sense, at Lady Iris's you expected to meet everybody.

She had just come out of the cloak-room, and was so tender and even apologetic that he had not the heart to be other than friendly. As the other guests dropped in, the pair retreated into a shady corner, and she talked beside him till all moved off for the eating and drinking.

He had not been appointed to take her across to the dining-room, but at the table found her exactly opposite. She looked very charming between the candles, and then suddenly it dawned upon him that her previous manner must have originated in some false report about Marcia, of whose existence he had not heard for years. Anyhow, he was not disposed to resent an inexplicability in womankind, having found that it usually arose independently of fact, reason, probability, or his own deserts.

So he dined on, catching her eyes and the few pretty words she made opportunity to project across the table to him now and then. He was courteously responsive only, but Mrs. Pine-Avon herself distinctly made advances. He re-admired her, while at the same time her conduct in her own house had been enough to check his confidence--enough even to make him doubt if the Well-Beloved really resided within those contours, or had ever been more than the most transitory passenger through that interesting and accomplished soul.

He was pondering this question, yet growing decidedly moved by the playful pathos of her attitude when, by chance, searching his pocket for his handkerchief, something crackled, and he felt there an unopened letter, which had arrived at the moment he was leaving his house, and he had slipped into his coat to read in the cab as he drove along.

Pierston drew it sufficiently forth to observe by the post-mark that it came from his natal isle. Having hardly a correspondent in that part of the world now he began to conjecture on the possible sender.

The lady on his right, whom he had brought in, was a leading actress of the town--indeed, of the United Kingdom and America, for that matter--a creature in airy clothing, translucent, like a balsam or sea-anemone, without shadows, and in movement as responsive as some highly lubricated, many-wired machine, which, if one presses a particular spring, flies open and reveals its works. The spring in the present case was the artistic commendation she deserved and craved. At this particular moment she was engaged with the man on her own right, a representative of Family, who talked positively and hollowly, as if shouting down a vista of five hundred years from the Feudal past. The lady on Jocelyn's left, wife of a Lord Justice of Appeal, was in like manner talking to her companion on the outer side; so that, for the time, he was left to himself. He took advantage of the opportunity, drew out his letter, and read it as it lay upon his napkin, nobody observing him, so far as he was aware.

It came from the wife of one of his father's former workmen, and was concerning her son, whom she begged Jocelyn to recommend as candidate for some post in town that she wished him to fill. But the end of the letter was what arrested him--'You will be sorry to hear, Sir, that dear little Avice Caro, as we used to call her in her maiden days, is dead. She married her cousin, if you do mind, and went away from here for a good-few years, but was left a widow, and came back a twelvemonth ago; since when she faltered and faltered, and now she is gone.'

同类推荐
  • 膳夫录

    膳夫录

    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。
  • 摩邓女经

    摩邓女经

    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。
  • The World Set Free

    The World Set Free

    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。
  • 西铭述解

    西铭述解

    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。
  • 周生烈子

    周生烈子

    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
  • 摄政王的妖孽冷妃

    摄政王的妖孽冷妃

    穿越后一朝变王府的侧妃,好不容易逃离苦海却被无赖抓了回来,那她就好好折腾他这摄政王府,闹他个天翻地覆,看他还受的了吗?
  • 吕祖师三尼医世说述

    吕祖师三尼医世说述

    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。
  • 凤泣血:倾城颜

    凤泣血:倾城颜

    她只是和亲公主的小跟班,除了把晟王府那些女人斗得鸡飞狗跳外,真的没其他本事了。可是,那个臭王爷为什么让她出谋划策?好吧,如果非要承认,她还是有那么点小小的医术啦,只不过,来到古代后英雄无用武之地,最多就是纸上谈兵而已,谁让人家曾经学的是西医呢!原本很欢声的生活,在公主意外死亡后变得不一样,臭王爷怀疑她,为了洗刷冤屈,查找真相,她历经千辛万苦。然而,真相却是更大的阴谋……
  • 快穿,病娇攻略手册

    快穿,病娇攻略手册

    (1Ⅴ1)被一次一次的利用,即使是没心没肺也会感到疲惫。于是……系统:说好的人设呢?关铃神色不变,一本正经的瞎扯。“我有答应过你吗?”系统:?怒!这是任务啊!关铃依旧淡定,摸了摸自家媳妇儿的头。“哦,所以?”“我要抹杀你!哼!我难道还收拾不了你了?”系统气冲冲的去找抺杀系统,结果……看着又气冲冲回来的系统,关铃嘲笑出声。“怎么?找到办法了吗?”“我把你的记忆消除!”“呵!你,过来呀!”系统已气死,有事请烧纸。
  • 快穿系统:百分百蜜宠

    快穿系统:百分百蜜宠

    新文已发!《快穿之师父别装了》!喜欢的小可爱加个收藏!简介:付倾被关押千年,有朝一日绑定一只狐狸系统,踏上拯救悲惨男主的不归路。左左:【完成任务即可回家哦~】某男人处心积虑骗到手:回哪?除了我这儿哪都不许去!付倾被缠得手脚动弹不得,心想:你也得给我松绑啊!【小甜饼!风格不定!实力甜宠!1V1双洁!】裙号:718899846/欢迎来撩~
  • 金刚顶胜初瑜伽普贤菩萨念诵法经

    金刚顶胜初瑜伽普贤菩萨念诵法经

    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。
  • 刘耀文感谢青春遇见你

    刘耀文感谢青春遇见你

    我也不知道说啥,第一次写小说,不好的地方请多多担待!!!
  • 假面之恶魔联组

    假面之恶魔联组

    无欲的你,渴求的我,刹那交集的两人。遍地散落的欲望,是我追求的东西。如果得到更多就能实现愿望,那么,为了这个目的,我将不择手段。ps:主角自身拥有的为四联驱动器,所以为oooo
  • 康熙十讲

    康熙十讲

    康熙是中国历史上在位时间最长的一位君主。他名曰守成,实同开创。他勤于国事,好学不倦,奠定了清朝兴盛的根基;他所开创的“康乾盛世” 是中国古代的顶峰,是中国古代几千年发展的制高点;他励精图治,把清朝带上了快速发展的道路。康熙曾是一个与天花夺命的幼童,一个拥有天下却要忍气吞声,日日如同行走于钢刀边缘的少年;他也曾是一个力排众议果断撤藩,却又在漫长的战争中险些丧失了勇气的青年;他还是一个收复了台湾,驱逐了沙俄势力,又平息蒙藏地区动乱,加强了多民族国家的稳定和统一的中年人。同样是他,一生英明果断却在晚年陷入继承人的旋涡之中。
  • 大魔骨

    大魔骨

    【如果想要看见光,首先得把大骨熬成汤!】——————————〖萌新作者养成记,一个点击,即刻开始〗【契约:我自愿尝试阅读大魔骨,如果中毒身亡与作者无关!(默认已阅读)】【说明其一:绝不会刻意圣母的,但是也不会动不动灭人满门的,主角黑化也需要一个过程,因为是魂穿系列,你不能指望一个生活在社会主义核心价值观下的正常人一穿越到异世界就大杀特杀。其二:不会反穿,单穿!其三:主角前期性转真的只是剧情需要,这是男主文不动摇的,后面还会变回来的。其四:百章也才只是一个开始,在我预计的剧情里面甚至还没到十分之一。其五:萌新的文笔,阅历,词汇量,描写手法真的有限,请多包容】