登陆注册
19617900000074

第74章

His second-to feel that he would look a fool if they refused.He reined his horse in behind a tree,then perceived that it was equally impossible to spy on them.Nothing for it but to go home and await her coming!Sneaking out with that young bounder!He could not consult with June,because she had gone up that morning in the train of Eric Cobbley and his lot.And his father was still in 'that rotten Paris.'He felt that this was emphatically one of those moments for which he had trained himself,assiduously,at school,where he and a boy called Brent had frequently set fire to newspapers and placed them in the centre of their studies to accustom them to coolness in moments of danger.He did not feel at all cool waiting in the stable-yard,idly stroking the dog Balthasar,who queasy as an old fat monk,and sad in the absence of his master,turned up his face,panting with gratitude for this attention.It was half an hour before Holly came,flushed and ever so much prettier than she had any right to look.He saw her look at him quickly--guiltily of course--then followed her in,and,taking her arm,conducted her into what had been their grand-father's study.The room,not much used now,was still vaguely haunted for them both by a presence with which they associated tenderness,large drooping white moustaches,the scent of cigar smoke,and laughter.Here Jolly,in the prime of his youth,before he went to school at all,had been wont to wrestle with his grand-father,who even at eighty had an irresistible habit of crooking his leg.Here Holly,perched on the arm of the great leather chair,had stroked hair curving silvery over an ear into which she would whisper secrets.Through that window they had all three sallied times without number to cricket on the lawn,and a mysterious game called 'Wopsy-doozle,'not to be understood by outsiders,which made old Jolyon very hot.Here once on a warm night Holly had appeared in her 'nighty,'having had a bad dream,to have the clutch of it released.And here Jolly,having begun the day badly by introducing fizzy magnesia into Mademoiselle Beauce's new-laid egg,and gone on to worse,had been sent down (in the absence of his father)to the ensuing dialogue:

"Now,my boy,you mustn't go on like this."

"Well,she boxed my ears,Gran,so I only boxed hers,and then she boxed mine again.""Strike a lady?That'll never do!Have you begged her pardon?""Not yet."

"Then you must go and do it at once.Come along.""But she began it,Gran;and she had two to my one.""My dear,it was an outrageous thing to do."

"Well,she lost her temper;and I didn't lose mine.""Come along."

"You come too,then,Gran."

"Well--this time only."

And they had gone hand in hand.

Here--where the Waverley novels and Byron's works and Gibbon's Roman Empire and Humboldt's Cosmos,and the bronzes on the mantelpiece,and that masterpiece of the oily school,'Dutch Fishing-Boats at Sunset,'were fixed as fate,and for all sign of change old Jolyon might have been sitting there still,with legs crossed,in the arm chair,and domed forehead and deep eyes grave above The Times--here they came,those two grandchildren.And Jolly said:

"I saw you and that fellow in the Park."

The sight of blood rushing into her cheeks gave him some satisfaction;she ought to be ashamed!

"Well?"she said.

Jolly was surprised;he had expected more,or less.

"Do you know,"he said weightily,"that he called me a pro-Boer last term?And I had to fight him.""Who won?"

Jolly wished to answer:'I should have,'but it seemed beneath him.

"Look here!"he said,"what's the meaning of it?Without telling anybody!""Why should I?Dad isn't here;why shouldn't I ride with him?""You've got me to ride with.I think he's an awful young rotter."Holly went pale with anger.

"He isn't.It's your own fault for not liking him."And slipping past her brother she went out,leaving him staring at the bronze Venus sitting on a tortoise,which had been shielded from him so far by his sister's dark head under her soft felt riding hat.He felt queerly disturbed,shaken to his young foundations.A lifelong domination lay shattered round his feet.

He went up to the Venus and mechanically inspected the tortoise.

Why didn't he like Val Dartie?He could not tell.Ignorant of family history,barely aware of that vague feud which had started thirteen years before with Bosinney's defection from June in favour of Soames'wife,knowing really almost nothing about Val he was at sea.He just did dislike him.The question,however,was:What should he do?Val Dartie,it was true,was a second-cousin,but it was not the thing for Holly to go about with him.And yet to 'tell'of what he had chanced on was against his creed.In this dilemma he went and sat in the old leather chair and crossed his legs.It grew dark while he sat there staring out through the long window at the old oak-tree,ample yet bare of leaves,becoming slowly just a shape of deeper dark printed on the dusk.

'Grandfather!'he thought without sequence,and took out his watch.

He could not see the hands,but he set the repeater going.'Five o'clock!'His grandfather's first gold hunter watch,butter-smooth with age--all the milling worn from it,and dented with the mark of many a fall.The chime was like a little voice from out of that golden age,when they first came from St.John's Wood,London,to this house--came driving with grandfather in his carriage,and almost instantly took to the trees.Trees to climb,and grand-father watering the geranium-beds below!What was to be done?

Tell Dad he must come home?Confide in June?--only she was so--so sudden!Do nothing and trust to luck?After all,the Vac.would soon be over.Go up and see Val and warn him off?But how get his address?Holly wouldn't give it him!A maze of paths,a cloud of possibilities!He lit a cigarette.When he had smoked it halfway through his brow relaxed,almost as if some thin old hand had been passed gently over it;and in his ear something seemed to whisper:

'Do nothing;be nice to Holly,be nice to her,my dear!'And Jolly heaved a sigh of contentment,blowing smoke through his,nostrils.

But up in her room,divested of her habit,Holly was still frowning.'He is not--he is not!'were the words which kept forming on her lips.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 最强武皇

    最强武皇

    小混混白羽巧遇神棍老和尚,偶然习得神界流传的上古奇功,专修灵魂的《大愿心经》,似乎冥冥中自有安排,白羽穿越到了以修炼为主流的神州大陆,成为了一名不折不扣的废物少爷,然而在白羽得知了神州大陆上还存在着一种叫做“战魂”的另类灵魂之后,身怀专修灵魂的绝世奇功的白羽,开始了一段彪悍……
  • 闺情

    闺情

    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。
  • 朱门嫡影

    朱门嫡影

    她是相门嫡女,却因命中带煞被弃之如敝屣。最后惨死于爱人之手……她是现代女高材生,受人指点却一朝穿越,寻找命中眼带朱砂的男子。重生又来,她是她,亦不是她,为了他种的情根,为了改变命运一雪前耻。庶母阴险,她见招拆招,姊妹狠毒,她亦变得魔高三丈。爱意已断绝,却不料渣男竟对她情有独钟,傀儡太子、俊逸王爷、神秘公子,皆对她用情至深,是阴谋还是爱情?是重蹈覆辙,还是佳偶良缘?她寻他而来,他又会不会随她而去?命中的他又到底是何人?且看朱门嫡影为你展开一幅朱门深宅中的锦绣画卷。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 冷王宠妃

    冷王宠妃

    “你真的要杀我?”“是,谁让你伤害我的兰萱,就算你是我的王后,也不可以!”他将那把散发着寒光的长剑刺穿了她娇弱的身躯,同时,也亲手杀死了自己还未出生的孩子。而当他清醒过来时,一切都已经无法挽回了,后悔、自责又有何用呢?她已经离他而去了啊!命运是一个巨大的轮回,谁也不会预料将来会发生怎样超出自己预想的事。三年后,当他去华国巡视时,那个死三年的人竟然笑着靠在另一个男子肩上,笑容明艳。他上前叫住她时,她却微笑着问他,你是谁?这究竟又是怎么一回事呢?而当一切都回到原始起点时,面对权倾天下的魅夜,白衣胜雪的凌宵,温柔多情的冥羽,她又该如何抉择呢?爱与恨,情与痴。究竟是谁成了谁的棋子,又是谁预谋了谁?
  • 现代爱恋:陈妍希陈晓

    现代爱恋:陈妍希陈晓

    看看现代的姑姑【陈妍希】和过儿【陈晓】的甜蜜爱恋
  • 宠婚守则

    宠婚守则

    据说莲花镇的齐家下了血本给顶顶丑的儿子娶了方圆几十里最好看的云家三姐为妻,满镇的人都在观望,想看看云家三姐过门得怎么嫌弃这丑出风格的一家子。谁料那娇滴滴的小娘子也不知道眼睛是怎么长的,竟看那丑男越看越俊,还安份守已的过起日子来,实在叫人想不透。云三姐咬着手指尖,一双眼睛巴巴的看着自家相公:“我家相公好帅,还这么忠犬,傻子才会嫌弃。”满镇的傻子:……齐靖:“娘子真好看,还心灵手巧,贤惠大方,又最是不会与人口角的,可得看紧点,莫叫她吃了亏。”满镇子被云三姐明里暗里嘲讽过的小娘子:……凤的新文女配总是被穿越上传,喜欢的可以去看看。
  • 永恒神王

    永恒神王

    我本神王,将心明月,但求平凡,庸人自扰,神王归来,万世永存!
  • 凰破惊天:废柴灵女要逆天

    凰破惊天:废柴灵女要逆天

    她是外表纯洁内心腹黑的世界第一杀手一一空虞,扮猪吃老虎是她的风格,斩草除根是她的作风,执行任务时,被从天而降的一块儿豆腐给砸死,从而穿越,估计,她是死得最冤枉的杀手王了。什么?爹不疼娘不爱,还有几个一心要她死的姐姐,碰上这样的人,空虞也是醉了,既然老天给了她重生的机会,她便要用着机会,站在这个世界的顶端,可是,那个几个男人是怎么回事儿?“亲~缠着我很好玩是吗?”“既然你都叫我们亲了,我们还有什么理由不跟着你呢?”众男齐齐奸笑....
  • 浮沉如梦

    浮沉如梦

    剪不断,理还乱,他是弟弟,还是名义上的侄儿,她该如何选择?世俗的眼光,如何看待这个骄傲的公主?他们,会有怎样的结局?
  • 名门私宠:娇妻太冷淡

    名门私宠:娇妻太冷淡

    他是c市的亿万财阀,无冕之王。第一次见面,他成了她的解药,一夜缠绵。第二次见面,她为了拿回自己的婚戒,被他占尽便宜。第三次见面,他用救过她的护士威胁她,并扬言如果她不来就让他的兄弟们好好“伺候”这位小姐。一场误会,一次阴谋,她被推至风口浪尖。她的嘴唇毫无血色,满脸绝情的看着自己面前满是王者气息的男人,轻咬嘴唇,冷冷的说道:“在你身边,我宁可去死!”他狠狠的攫取她的双唇,疯狂的蹂躏,直到她的嘴唇恢复了一丝血色,才离开,凄冷的宛如地狱里的撒旦一般,冷漠的说道:“好啊,明月溪,那就让我陪你一起去地狱!到那时候,就算是做鬼,你也依旧是我南宫爵的女人!”