登陆注册
19499400000078

第78章

"Give us a song, Archie, let her go," urged Thorpe impatiently.

"All right," replied the man very meekly.

Another silence fell.It got to be a little awful.The poor woodsman, pilloried before the regards of this polite circle, out of his element, suffering cruelly, nevertheless made no sign nor movement one way or the other.At last when the situation had almost reached the breaking point of hysteria, he began.

His voice ordinarily was rather a good tenor.Now he pitched it too high; and went on straining at the high notes to the very end.

Instead of offering one of the typical woods chanteys, he conceived that before so grand an audience he should give something fancy.He therefore struck into a sentimental song of the cheap music-hall type.

There were nine verses, and he drawled through them all, hanging whiningly on the nasal notes in the fashion of the untrained singer.

Instead of being a performance typical of the strange woods genius, it was merely an atrocious bit of cheap sentimentalism, badly rendered.

The audience listened politely.When the song was finished it murmured faint thanks.

"Oh, give us 'Jack Haggerty,' Archie," urged Thorpe.

But the woodsman rose, nodded his head awkwardly, and made his escape.He entered the men's camp, swearing, and for the remainder of the day made none but blasphemous remarks.

The beagles, however, were a complete success.They tumbled about, and lolled their tongues, and laughed up out of a tangle of themselves in a fascinating manner.Altogether the visit to Camp One was a success, the more so in that on the way back, for the first time, Thorpe found that chance--and Mrs.Cary--had allotted Hilda to his care.

A hundred yards down the trail they encountered Phil.The dwarf stopped short, looked attentively at the girl, and then softly approached.When quite near to her he again stopped, gazing at her with his soul in his liquid eyes.

"You are more beautiful than the sea at night," he said directly.

The others laughed."There's sincerity for you, Miss Hilda," said young Mr.Morton.

"Who is he?" asked the girl after they had moved "Our chore-boy," answered Thorpe with great brevity, for he was thinking of something much more important.

After the rest of the party had gone ahead, leaving them sauntering more slowly down the trail, he gave it voice.

"Why don't you come to the pine grove any more?" he asked bluntly.

"Why?" countered Hilda in the manner of women.

"I want to see you there.I want to talk with you.I can't talk with all that crowd around.""I'll come to-morrow," she said--then with a little mischievous laugh, "if that'll make you talk.""You must think I'm awfully stupid," agreed Thorpe bitterly.

"Ah, no! Ah, no!" she protested softly."You must not say that."She was looking at him very tenderly, if he had only known it, but he did not, for his face was set in discontented lines straight before him.

"It is true," he replied.

They walked on in silence, while gradually the dangerous fascination of the woods crept down on them.Just before sunset a hush falls on nature.The wind has died, the birds have not yet begun their evening songs, the light itself seems to have left off sparkling and to lie still across the landscape.Such a hush now lay on their spirits.Over the way a creeper was droning sleepily a little chant, --the only voice in the wilderness.In the heart of the man, too, a little voice raised itself alone.

"Sweetheart, sweetheart, sweetheart!" it breathed over and over again.After a while he said it gently in a half voice.

"No, no, hush!" said the girl, and she laid the soft, warm fingers of one hand across his lips, and looked at him from a height of superior soft-eyed tenderness as a woman might look at a child.

"You must not.It is not right."

Then he kissed the fingers very gently before they were withdrawn, and she said nothing at all in rebuke, but looked straight before her with troubled eyes.

The voices of evening began to raise their jubilant notes.From a tree nearby the olive thrush sang like clockwork; over beyond carolled eagerly a black-throat, a myrtle warbler, a dozen song sparrows, and a hundred vireos and creepers.Down deep in the blackness of the ancient woods a hermit thrush uttered his solemn bell note, like the tolling of the spirit of peace.And in Thorpe's heart a thousand tumultuous voices that had suddenly roused to clamor, died into nothingness at the music of her softly protesting voice.

Chapter XLII

Thorpe returned to Camp One shortly after dark.He found there Scotty Parsons, who had come up to take charge of the crew engaged in clearing French Creek.The man brought him a number of letters sent on by Collins, among which was one from Wallace Carpenter.

After commending the camping party to his companion's care, and giving minute directions as to how and where to meet it, the young fellow went on to say that affairs were going badly on the Board.

"Some interest that I haven't been able to make out yet has been hammering our stocks down day after day," he wrote."I don't understand it, for the stocks are good--they rest on a solid foundation of value and intrinsically are worth more than is bid for them right now.Some powerful concern is beating them down for a purpose of its own.Sooner or later they will let up, and then we'll get things back in good shape.I am amply protected now, thanks to you, and am not at all afraid of losing my holdings.

The only difficulty is that I am unable to predict exactly when the other fellows will decide that they have accomplished whatever they are about, and let up.It may not be before next year.In that case I couldn't help you out on those notes when they come due.

So put in your best licks, old man.You may have to pony up for a little while, though of course sooner or later I can put it all back.

Then, you bet your life, I keep out of it.Lumbering's good enough for yours truly.

同类推荐
  • 佛说蓱沙王五愿经

    佛说蓱沙王五愿经

    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。
  • 学治说赘

    学治说赘

    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 Princess and Curdie

    The Princess and Curdie

    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。
  • 陇蜀余闻

    陇蜀余闻

    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。
  • 陆九渊集

    陆九渊集

    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。
热门推荐
  • 慈氏菩萨所说大乘缘生稻[卄幹]喻经

    慈氏菩萨所说大乘缘生稻[卄幹]喻经

    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。
  • 阿尔卑斯山的蓝莓

    阿尔卑斯山的蓝莓

    本书是一本散文随笔,作者通过对阿尔卑斯山美丽风光的描述,抒发了自己对大自然的热爱。
  • 这个王妃不太冷

    这个王妃不太冷

    繁华落尽,辛酸自知,直到最后王妃辛月才知道这一切不过都是骗局,就连这副身体的爹爹都是要江山不要女儿!落下悬崖后的她心已死,半步多一日游后让她正视这个世界。一夜过后,辛月冷傲无情,一条血路过后,自己得到了最想要得到的,报仇!但是当离王亲自被自己杀掉的那一刹那为什么自己还那么的心疼?是和前世的告别,还是什么原因?血染江山的画,试看谁予繁华?
  • 唐宋八大家(第四卷)

    唐宋八大家(第四卷)

    唐宋八大家,是唐宋时期以写诗歌和散文为主的八位文学家的合称,即唐代的韩愈、柳宗元和宋代的苏洵、苏轼、苏辙(合称三苏)、欧阳修、王安石、曾巩八人。其中韩愈、柳宗元是唐代古文运动的领袖,欧阳修、三苏等四人是宋代古文运动的核心人物,王安石、曾巩是临川文学的代表人物。他们先后掀起的古文革新浪潮,使诗文发展的陈旧面貌焕然一新。
  • 白鹿论丛

    白鹿论丛

    白鹿书院的卖点即重点是推广传统文化。5月28日陕西省隆重举行的纪念司马迁诞辰2000周年大型的电视直播活动“风追司马”,我来了,这次白鹿书院成立我也来参加,为什么两次都来呢?因为考虑文化问题。但究竟什么是文化?可以说我们的兵马俑、秦陵是,从羊肉泡摸到葫芦头也都是文化。现在文化特别泛滥,文化是个筐,什么都往里面装,酒文化、食文化、茶文化等等。那么究竟什么是文化,文化对我们有多么重要?我不是学者类型的人,是个在实践中摸索、自我思考的人,学习、看书只是作为我的一个参考。我得出的文化是一个时代的生活方式和生产方式产生的一种思维方式。
  • 竹马总裁太温柔

    竹马总裁太温柔

    付小小出生就是千金大小姐,原本会过着一身都荣华富贵的生活。可是天有不测风云,她这个大小姐在某一天突然掉下来了,于是从一个小小的职员开始做起。这对她来说是一个重大的打击,原本跟她要好称兄道弟的姐妹却渐渐远离,一张十分讨厌的冷漠脸。于是她开始奋斗,开始了平民的生活....不过老天或许是在怜悯她,这辈子的转折点也在青梅竹马出现之后。只是不知道这个幸运是喜还是悲!情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 网王之末日降临时

    网王之末日降临时

    文案当网球王子们的世界不再和平,当王子们的世界里出现丧尸,王子们该何去何从?是被末日同化道德沦丧?还是继续是那高傲的王子?
  • 九霄霸主

    九霄霸主

    我很软弱,甚至懦弱,因为一直以来我迷失了自己,忘记了自己是一个男人。十岁那年雁枫在宗门召唤大典上,召唤了一块让他被视为宗门耻辱的石头。自此沦落异乡,五年的摧残后,邪恶的黑袍人帮他解开了命运的禁制,从此雁枫被推到了风口浪尖。是继续软弱,还是选择坚强?
  • 重生之我的幸福家

    重生之我的幸福家

    长大后每个人心中都或多或少有一些遗憾的事,如果能重回过去,又该有着一个怎样的未来?一次意外,让陶筠筱重回小时候,不太一样的家,不太一样的时空,这一次,那些遗憾的,那些错过的,将统统握住!看她怎样重塑将来,怎样拥有自己的幸福家!她又会遇上怎样的他??和他们??PS:看书看了不少年,写书却还是第一次,有不足,有生涩,可能有大家以前熟悉的痕迹,但我写的只是我心中的故事。希望大家支持新人新作,多多鼓励,多多推荐,多多建议。
  • 爱上古代帅哥

    爱上古代帅哥

    一次游玩加探险,她无意中捡到一只打开时空之门的钥匙。一时贪玩,她兴起了去冒冒险玩一玩刺激一下脑细胞。人家说好奇心可以杀死一只猫,而她的好奇心则是——她把自己丢在古代回不来了呜呜……才刚回古代,她就把那钥匙给弄丢了。一失手成千古恨哪!情节虚构,请勿模仿!