登陆注册
5262700000025

第25章 A Daughter of Maoriland(2)

The aunt, two sisters, and as many of the others, including the children, as were within sight or hail at the time -- most of them could not by any possible means have had the slightest connection with the business in hand -- accompanied the teacher to the cottage.

August took to the flax directly she caught sight of her relations, and was with difficulty induced to return. There was a lot of talk in Maori, during which the girl and her aunt shuffled and swung round at the back of each other, and each talked over her shoulder, and laughed foolishly and awkwardly once or twice; but in the end the girl was sullenly determined not to return home, so it was decided that she should stay. The schoolmistress made tea.

August brightened from the first day. She was a different girl altogether.

"I never saw such a change in a girl," said the young schoolmistress, and one or two others. "I always thought she was a good girl if taken the right way; all she wanted was a change and kind treatment."

But the stolid old Maori chairman of the school committee only shrugged his shoulders and said (when the schoolmistress, woman-like, pressed him for an opinion to agree with her own), "You can look at it two ways, Mrs. Lorrens." Which, by the way, was about the only expression of opinion that the teacher was ever able to get out of him on any subject.

August worked and behaved well. She was wonderfully quick in picking up English ways and housework. True, she was awkward and not over cleanly in some things, but her mistress had patience with her.

Who wouldn't have? She "couldn't do enough" for her benefactress; she hung on her words and sat at her footstool of evenings in a way that gladdened the teacher's sentimental nature; she couldn't bear to see him help his wife with a hat-pin or button-- August must do it. She insisted on doing her mistress' hair every night.

In short, she tried in every way to show her gratitude.

The teacher and his wife smiled brightly at each other behind her back, and thought how cheerful the house was since she came, and wondered what they'd do without her. It was a settled thing that they should take her back to the city with them, and have a faithful and grateful retainer all their lives and a sort of Aunt Chloe for their children, when they had any. The teacher got yards of copy out of her for his "Maori Sketches and Characters", worked joyously at his romance, and felt great already, and was happy. She had a bed made up temporarily (until the teacher could get a spring mattress for her from town) on the floor in the dining-room, and when she'd made her bed she'd squat on it in front of the fire and sing Maori songs in a soft voice.

She'd sing the teacher and his wife, in the next room, to sleep.

Then she'd get up and have a feed, but they never heard her.

Her manners at the table (for she was treated "like one of themselves" in the broadest sense of the term) were surprisingly good, considering that the adults of her people were decidedly cow-like in white society, and scoffed sea-eggs, shell-fish, and mutton-birds at home with a gallop which was not edifying. Her appetite, it was true, was painful at times to the poetic side of the teacher's nature; but he supposed that she'd been half-starved at home, poor girl, and would get over it. Anyway, the copy he'd get out of her would repay him for this and other expenses a hundredfold.

Moreover, begging and borrowing had ceased with her advent, and the teacher set this down to her influence.

The first jar came when she was sent on horseback to the town for groceries, and didn't get back till late the next day. She explained that some of her relations got hold of her and made her stay, and wanted her to go into public-houses with them, but she wouldn't.

She said that SHE wanted to come home. But why didn't she? The teacher let it pass, and hoped she'd gain strength of character by-and-bye.

He had waited up late the night before with her supper on the hob; and he and his wife had been anxious for fear something had happened to the poor girl who was under their care. He had walked to the treacherous river-ford several times during the evening, and waited there for her. So perhaps he was tired, and that was why he didn't write next night.

The sugar-bag, the onion-basket, the potato-bag and the tea-chest began to "go down" alarmingly, and an occasional pound of candles, a pigeon, a mutton-bird (plucked and ready for Sunday's cooking), and other little trifles went, also. August couldn't understand it, and the teacher believed her, for falsehood and deceit are foreign to the simple natures of the modern Maoris. There were no cats; but no score of ordinary cats could have given colour to the cat theory, had it been raised in this case. The breath of August advertised onions more than once, but no human stomach could have accounted for the quantity.

She surely could not have eaten the other things raw -- and she had no opportunities for private cooking, as far as the teacher and his wife could see. The other Maoris were out of the question; they were all strictly honest.

Thefts and annoyances of the above deion were credited to the "swaggies" who infested the roads, and had a very bad name down that way; so the teacher loaded his gun, and told August to rouse him at once, if she heard a sound in the night. She said she would; but a heavy-weight "swaggie" could have come in and sat on her and had a smoke without waking her.

She couldn't be trusted to go a message. She'd take from three to six hours, and come back with an excuse that sounded genuine from its very simplicity.

Another sister of hers lay ill in an isolated hut, alone and uncared for, except by the teacher's wife, and occasionally by a poor pa outcast who had negro blood in her veins, and a love for a white loafer.

同类推荐
  • 亳州牡丹史

    亳州牡丹史

    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。
  • PARADISE REGAINED

    PARADISE REGAINED

    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。
  • 今夕行

    今夕行

    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。
  • 苇航纪谈

    苇航纪谈

    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。
  • 慨古录

    慨古录

    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。
热门推荐
  • 爱在彩云间

    爱在彩云间

    纪东阳,张海鸥,曹欣,史迁,郑意,方晴晴,魏国庆,他们是一群从不同地方来到同一所学校学习的大学生。他们热情,浪漫,才华横溢,伴随着他们的几段欲说还休的浪漫爱情故事不断成长。其间的酸,甜,苦,辣各不相同。纪东阳与张海鸥,曹欣纠缠不清的爱情,郑意的执着等待。史迁,方晴晴的艰难选择。。。最后他们都将如何呢。。。。
  • 三具足经忧波提舍

    三具足经忧波提舍

    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。
  • 狐君宠妻有术

    狐君宠妻有术

    小小狐女藏身书楼,只想低调修行,谁知……千年狐君:你师父已将你许配给本公子,快到碗里来!九天真君:缺个劳力,徒儿务必拿下这玄狐。太子:不要抢我的狐狸!千年幽魂:求关注,不然就捣乱!众道士:打酱油…最终,狐女表示:我有通天的本事,却没人告诉我?
  • 苏悉地羯啰经

    苏悉地羯啰经

    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。
  • 末日BOSS

    末日BOSS

    末日降临,在这个末世中谁主沉浮!“去TM的一刀999!”“等等,我才是boss?”
  • 落花镇

    落花镇

    王小必一口气游开,钻进深水,像只蛤蟆一样趴在水底不敢动,实在憋不住了才探出头来吐口气,随手掐了根芦杆又潜回水里。把芦杆咬在了嘴里,趴在水底的王小必想,村里早就传开了,说日本人要来。穿黄衣服会不会是日本人?
  • 穿越之小姐代嫁记

    穿越之小姐代嫁记

    尧姬,一个拥有魔法的超现代个性美女,却因为懒,而被魔丝登魔法家族的长老们打入无间地狱,永世不得超生……呃,其实是用空间魔法将她送回古代,与凝月轩山庄的刁蛮大小姐祁依铃交换了灵魂!好吧,其外貌,身份,银子,都挺符合她好吃懒做的人生追求的,可是,她刚穿越过来就面临一个重大的问题——嫁人!她承认,看着这个夫君的一张俊脸吃饭睡觉是一种享受,但是——他为什么总是想非礼她?纵使她使出浑身魔法,还是抵挡不了这个色狼的无耻偷袭。呃,好吧,除了偶尔被非礼外,生活过得也蛮甜蜜愉快的,只是,不想在古代生孩子的她,不得不背着夫君,走遍整个京城的医馆,寻找不孕的方法……
  • 邪王宠妃:废材小姐要逆天

    邪王宠妃:废材小姐要逆天

    她是冷艳无情的女杀手。一朝穿越,成了南宫家人人欺辱的废材小姐。生死间,被天地奇兵封天塔认主。从此,丹药随我吃,天材任我用。渣男让我抽,绿婊由我杀。小小萌兽,黏上我。魔尊美人,宠着我。踏征途,修长生,俾睨天下横着走!
  • 娇鸾令

    娇鸾令

    魏鸾死而复生的那一刻,才是齐州风云翻涌的开始……昔日的仇人们还言笑晏晏,拉起魏家二姑娘的手家长里短的闲聊,却永远不会知道,危险正在一步步逼近。等到众人回过神来,魏家的二姑娘,却成了谁也动不得的人物——齐州大地无人不知,二姑娘手段高明,叫齐王殿下甘心为她摘星捧月。
  • 不可思议的末日

    不可思议的末日

    首先这并非是讲述如何在末日求生!而是怎么创造末世,将世界玩弄于鼓掌之中。掀起丧尸狂潮!带领恶魔入侵!引导虫族降临!在这末日游戏之中,一切都由我一手缔造!诸君一起来创造一次末日的狂欢盛宴吧!ps:新坑《不可思议的圣遗物》已开.