登陆注册
5393100000099

第99章

A rain began to fall. I paused upon the doorstep for a minute, enjoying the cool drops upon by upturned face, the tonic sharpness of the keen east wind; then slipped my key into the lock and entered.

The door of old Deleglise's studio on the first floor happened to he open. Hitherto, beyond the usual formal salutations, when by chance we met upon the stairs, I had exchanged but few words with my eccentric landlord; but remembering his kindly face, the desire came upon me to tell him my good fortune. I felt sure his eyes would lighten with delight. By instinct I knew him for a young man's man.

I tapped lightly; no answer came. Someone was talking; it sounded like a girl's voice. I pushed the door further open and walked in; such was the custom of the house. It was a large room, built over the yard, lighted by one high window, before which was the engraving desk, shaded under a screen of tissue paper. At the further end of the room stood a large cheval-glass, and in front of this, its back towards me, was a figure that excited my curiosity; so that remaining where I was, partly hidden behind a large easel, I watched it for awhile in silence. Above a heavily flounced blue skirt, which fell in creases on the floor and trailed a couple of yards or so behind, it wore a black low-cut sleeveless bodice--much too big for it--of the fashion early Victorian. A good deal of dark-brown hair, fastened up by hair-pins that stuck out in all directions like quills upon a porcupine, suggesting collapse with every movement, was ornamented by three enormous green feathers, one of which hung limply over the lady's left ear. Three times, while I watched, unnoticed, the lady propped it into a more befitting attitude, and three times, limp and intoxicated-looking, it fell back into its former foolish position.

Her long, thin arms, displaying a pair of brilliantly red elbows, pointed to quite a dangerous degree, terminated in hands so very sunburnt as to convey the impression of a pair of remarkably well-fitting gloves. Her right hand grasped and waved with determination a large lace fan, her left clutched fiercely the front of her skirt. With a sweeping curtsey to herself in the glass, which would have been more effective could she have avoided tying her legs together with her skirt--a _contretemps_ necessitating the use of both hands and a succession of jumps before she could disentangle herself--she remarked so soon as she had recovered her balance:

"So sorry I am late. My carriage was unfortunately delayed."

The excuse, I gathered, was accepted, for with a gracious smile and a vigorous bow, by help of which every hairpin made distinct further advance towards freedom, she turned, and with much dignity and head over the right shoulder took a short walk to the left. At the end of six short steps she stopped and began kicking. For what reason, I, at first, could not comprehend. It dawned upon me after awhile that her object was the adjustment of her train. Finding the manoeuvre too difficult of accomplishment by feet alone, she stooped, and, taking the stuff up in her hands, threw it behind her. Then, facing north, she retraced her steps to the glass, talking to herself, as she walked, in the high-pitched drawl, distinctive, as my stage knowledge told me, of aristocratic society.

"Oh, do you think so--really? Ah, yes; you say that. Certainly not!

I shouldn't think of it." There followed what I am inclined to believe was intended for a laugh, musical but tantalising. If so, want of practice marred the effort. The performance failed to satisfy even herself. She tried again; it was still only a giggle.

Before the glass she paused, and with a haughty inclination of her head succeeded for the third time in displacing the intoxicated feather.

"Oh, bother the silly thing!" she said in a voice so natural as to be, by contrast with her previous tone, quite startling.

She fixed it again with difficulty, muttering something inarticulate.

Then, her left hand resting on an imaginary coat-sleeve, her right holding her skirt sufficiently high to enable her to move, she commenced to majestically gyrate.

Whether, hampered as she was by excess of skirt, handicapped by the natural clumsiness of her age, catastrophe in any case would not sooner or later have overtaken her, I have my doubts. I have since learnt her own view to be that but for catching sight, in turning, of my face, staring at her through the bars of the easel, all would have gone well and gracefully. Avoiding controversy on this point, the facts to be recorded are, that, seeing me, she uttered a sudden exclamation of surprise, dropped her skirt, trod on her train, felt her hair coming down, tried to do two things at once, and sat upon the floor. I ran to her assistance. With flaming face and flashing eyes she sprang to her feet. There was a sound as of the rushing down of avalanches. The blue flounced skirt lay round her on the floor. She stood above its billowy folds, reminiscent of Venus rising from the waves--a gawky, angular Venus in a short serge frock, reaching a little below her knees, black stockings and a pair of prunella boots of a size suggesting she had yet some inches to grow before reaching her full height.

"I hope you haven't hurt yourself," I said.

The next moment I didn't care whether she had or whether she hadn't.

She did not reply to my kindly meant enquiry. Instead, her hand swept through the air in the form of an ample semi-circle. It terminated on my ear. It was not a small hand; it was not a soft hand; it was not that sort of hand. The sound of the contact rang through the room like a pistol shot; I beard it with my other ear. I sprang at her, and catching her before she had recovered her equilibrium, kissed her.

I did not kiss her because I wanted to. I kissed her because I could not box her ears back in return, which I should have preferred doing.

I kissed her, hoping it would make her mad. It did. If a look could have killed me, such would have been the tragic ending of this story.

It did not kill me; it did me good.

同类推荐
  • 春卿遗稿

    春卿遗稿

    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。
  • 烹葵

    烹葵

    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。
  • 送钦差大臣侯官林公序

    送钦差大臣侯官林公序

    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。
  • 葛仙翁肘后方备急方

    葛仙翁肘后方备急方

    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。
  • 袁州仰山慧寂禅师语录

    袁州仰山慧寂禅师语录

    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。
热门推荐
  • 我是一个原始人

    我是一个原始人

    天空一碧如洗,阳光普照山林,整个世界都显得一片安静祥和,带着一种独有的静谧。看着穿着性感虎皮短裙手里拿着棍子,带着十余个人嗷嗷叫着去追赶披毛犀的首领,韩成禁不住的将稍微蜷着的右手放到微张的嘴边,再一次的发出了感慨:“我的天呐!”(没有系统,没有空间,不带外挂的穿越,纯正的原始种田文,不会出现修仙之类的东西,喜欢轻松种田的书友请放心阅读。623605956,建的一个书友群,名字叫守白斋,有兴趣的书友可以加一下。)
  • 正道大妖

    正道大妖

    弱小却从来不懂得认输,绝望却从来不选择放弃。烟花的绽放只是瞬间的夺目,夕阳的陶醉却不知黑夜即将来临。旭日的东升,就像那只新生的大妖,正朝着苍穹发出攻击的咆哮。
  • 九分帅十分拽

    九分帅十分拽

    (10更以上/日)十六岁花季少女姚小布,从她世界里失踪的少年,五年后突然出现。然而,他却装作不认识她,冷漠疏离。少年左戈的到来,给小布平静的生活掀起了波澜,先是受到王子杨耀宾的青睐,再是偶遇奇怪的帅男孩杜德跃,接着又是神秘美少年的热烈追求……这一切似乎都潜藏在一团大谜里。五年前到底发生过什么?
  • 冰魄寒光剑

    冰魄寒光剑

    本书讲述武当派北支掌门之子桂华生在西域的传奇经历和其与华玉公主的爱情故事。连载时书名为《幽谷寒冰》。
  • 今昔岁月

    今昔岁月

    本书是作者的回忆录,包括“少年时期”、“投笔从戎到部队转业”、“在阿城的二十年”、“改革开放来到四川”、“在东方电气集团”等部分。
  • 僵尸系统之尸控万界

    僵尸系统之尸控万界

    “不会吧,难道我也成为了广大穿越人士其中的一个?看着眼前站成一排的僵尸,这尼玛就就厉害了!先看看有没有老爷爷!金手指什么的!猪脚光辉也不能少是吧!”“系统绑定中……”卧槽!真有金手指!掐了一把身边的僵尸,疼吗?卧槽没反应,看来是没睡醒!嗯?不对这尼玛是死人疼个屁啊!看来是真的,尼玛没想到我赵日天也有春天!“系统绑定完成,是否启动?”“启动,当然得启动!”我迫不及待的吼道!“系统启动扫描宿主数据!……扫描完毕!”秦浩:凡人,永不能修仙!what?永不能修仙?什么鬼?我内心一万头草泥马狂奔而过!说好的金手指呢?说好的无敌呢?玩呢?
  • 逃杀之末日迷城

    逃杀之末日迷城

    末日世界的来临,面临这两种选择。生存还是死亡。逃过了生死,躲过了结局,那接下来等待的又将是什么呢。“你到底是一个什么怪物,竟然有这样的能力”傅子琛说道。“你是谁,你到底是谁”薇薇安。“原来是这样………………”看千月是怎么在末日活下去的,看薇薇安是怎么在异国生存的。(搭配着行尸走肉的内容,希望你们不要介意)
  • 随身种田

    随身种田

    因为家庭变故,不得不辍学回家务农的刘睿,在得到了一颗神秘的石珠之后,生活发生了翻天覆地的变化。
  • 本草纲目别名录

    本草纲目别名录

    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。
  • 女科切要

    女科切要

    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。