登陆注册
19650900000064

第64章 THE GODDESS OF EXCELSIOR(5)

While you boys were just fussin' round, doin' nothing, I wrote to the express company that a box of women's damaged duds had arrived here, while we were looking for our statue; that you chaps were so riled at bein' sold by them that you dumped the whole blamed thing in the creek. But I added, if they'd let me know what the damage was, I'd send 'em a draft to cover it. After a spell of waitin' they said they'd call it square for two hundred dollars, considering our disappointment. And I sent the draft. That's spurred them up to get over our statue, I reckon. And, now that it's coming, it will set us right with the boys."

"And SHE," said Clinton Grey again, pointing to the locked chest, "belongs to us?"

"Until we can find some lady guest that will take her with the rooms," returned the president, a little cynically.

But the arrival of the real statue and its erection in the hotel vestibule created a new sensation. The members of the Excelsior Company were loud in its praises except the executive committee, whose coolness was looked upon by the others as an affectation of superiority. It awakened the criticism and jealousy of the nearest town.

"We hear," said the "Red Dog Advertiser," "that the long-promised statue has been put up in that high-toned Hash Dispensary they call a hotel at Excelsior. It represents an emaciated squaw in a scanty blanket gathering roots, and carrying a bit of thorn-bush kindlings behind her. The high-toned, close corporation of Excelsior may consider this a fair allegory of California; WE should say it looks mighty like a prophetic forecast of a hard winter on Sycamore Creek and scarcity of provisions. However, it isn't our funeral, though it's rather depressing to the casual visitor on his way to dinner.

For a long time this work of art was missing and supposed to be lost, but by being sternly and persistently rejected at every express office on the route, it was at last taken in at Excelsior."

There was some criticism nearer home.

"What do you think of it, Miss Marsh?" said the president politely to that active young secretary, as he stood before it in the hall.

The young woman adjusted her eye-glasses over her aquiline nose.

"As an idea or a woman, sir?"

"As a woman, madam," said the president, letting his brown eyes slip for a moment from Miss Marsh's corn-colored crest over her straight but scant figure down to her smart slippers.

"Well, sir, she could wear YOUR boots, and there isn't a corset in Sacramento would go round her."

"Thank you!" he returned gravely, and moved away. For a moment a wild idea of securing possession of the figure some dark night, and, in company with his fellow-conspirators, of trying those beautiful clothes upon her, passed through his mind, but he dismissed it. And then occurred a strange incident, which startled even his cool, American sanity.

It was a beautiful moonlight night, and he was returning to a bedroom at the hotel which he temporarily occupied during the painting of his house. It was quite late, he having spent the evening with a San Francisco friend after a business conference which assured him of the remarkable prosperity of Excelsior. It was therefore with some human exaltation that he looked around the sleeping settlement which had sprung up under the magic wand of their good fortune. The full moon had idealized their youthful designs with something of their own youthful coloring, graciously softening the garish freshness of paint and plaster, hiding with discreet obscurity the disrupted banks and broken woods at the beginning and end of their broad avenues, paving the rough river terrace with tessellated shadows, and even touching the rapid stream which was the source of their wealth with a Pactolean glitter.

The windows of the hotel before him, darkened within, flashed in the moonbeams like the casements of Aladdin's palace. Mingled with his ambition, to-night, were some softer fancies, rarely indulged by him in his forecast of the future of Excelsior--a dream of some fair partner in his life, after this task was accomplished, yet always of some one moving in a larger world than his youth had known. Rousing the half sleeping porter, he found, however, only the spectral gold-seeker in the vestibule,--the rays of his solitary candle falling upon her divining-rod with a quaint persistency that seemed to point to the stairs he was ascending.

When he reached the first landing the rising wind through an open window put out his light, but, although the staircase was in darkness, he could see the long corridor above illuminated by the moonlight throughout its whole length. He had nearly reached it when the slow but unmistakable rustle of a dress in the distance caught his ear. He paused, not only in the interest of delicacy, but with a sudden nervous thrill he could not account for. The rustle came nearer--he could hear the distinct frou-frou of satin; and then, to his bewildered eyes, what seemed to be the figure of the dummy, arrayed in the pale blue evening dress he knew so well, passed gracefully and majestically down the corridor. He could see the shapely folds of the skirt, the symmetry of the bodice, even the harmony of the trimmings. He raised his eyes, half affrightedly, prepared to see the headless shoulders, but they--and what seemed to be a head--were concealed in a floating "cloud" or nubia of some fleecy tissue, as if for protection from the evening air. He remained for an instant motionless, dazed by this apparent motion of an inanimate figure; but as the absurdity of the idea struck him he hurriedly but stealthily ascended the remaining stairs, resolved to follow it. But he was only in time to see it turn into the angle of another corridor, which, when he had reached it, was empty. The figure had vanished!

同类推荐
  • 楚辞

    楚辞

    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。
  • 茗笈

    茗笈

    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。
  • 淡水厅志

    淡水厅志

    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。
  • 五显灵观大帝灯仪

    五显灵观大帝灯仪

    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。
  • 法澜澄禅师语录

    法澜澄禅师语录

    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。
热门推荐
  • 最有趣的对联故事

    最有趣的对联故事

    作为中国的国粹,对联因其具有独特的形式、丰富的内容、铿锵的节奏和优美的文采,始终为广大群众喜闻乐见,尤其能培养人们的优良品德和高尚情操,历来起着潜移默化的激励作用。对联雅称“楹联”,俗称对子。它言简意深,对仗工整,平仄协调,是一字一音的汉语言独特的艺术形式,可以说,对联艺术是中华民族的文化瑰宝。
  • 亿万契约:男神蜜婚33天

    亿万契约:男神蜜婚33天

    某天,唯一很幽怨的扑到自家老公怀中说道:“老公,今天有人说要我电话”。沈倾世刚想发火,唯一接着说道:“我果断拒绝了,我说你有毛病吧,好几千块钱的电话能给你?他说跟我要电话号码,我说我这号码都用好几年了也不能给你啊!然后他就走了,我发现真是有病啊,就差抢了是不是?见面就要电话,完了还要电话号码,我号码里面还有话费呢”!沈倾世看着怀中某女自豪的表情,为之点赞道:“做的对”。有人问,沈倾世,沈唯一是你的什么?沈倾世嘴角挂着笑说道:“她是我的倾世唯一”。
  • 神兽养殖宗师

    神兽养殖宗师

    什么?你有凤凰?切,够哥的蚯蚓强吗?!什么?你有神龙?切,够哥的蚂蚁强吗?!什么?你的凤凰有浴火重生?切,哥的蚯蚓有不死术!什么?你的神龙力量强大?切,哥的蚂蚁有神之力,一根手指就把你扔回家去!
  • 罗驸马罹难记

    罗驸马罹难记

    唐末五代,中原大乱,群雄逐鹿。少年军阀、后梁驸马罗周翰,厌倦战争,接受道家思想,向往与世无争的生活。在太上老君、火烛神君等神仙的帮助下,一路斩妖除怪,历经千难万阻,终于胜利到达理想中的东南乐土,从此过上平静的田园生活。
  • 飓风突击队

    飓风突击队

    袁剑飞,国际刑警,深藏绝艺,在贝拉大厦爆炸案中,查到了恐怖集团的重要线索,和陈戈一起共同建立了飓风突击队。在解救人质,排爆,制止劫机事件,破获生化危机阴谋上,出生入死,成就了特种兵的一个铁血丰碑。
  • 学会进退

    学会进退

    每个成功者都可以说是进退自如的高手,要想掌握好进退的方法和时机,首先要从“败退胜进”的思维误区中走出来,进不见得就强,而退并不一定是弱。那些忍耐退让的人背后可能隐藏着无比巨大的力量,现在占据优势的人可能危机重重,而现在退让之人可能笑到最后。所以,先要在脑海中把非此即彼的定式思维扫除掉。进退只是一种策略,它并不是最后的结果。进不一定要轰轰烈烈;退也不一定显山露水。进退之形并不一定全都着于形迹。
  • 孤寂留心

    孤寂留心

    ‘轰隆隆----’乌云密布的天空想起了沉闷的雷声,几声雷响过后,下起了大雨,整个城市被乌云遮掩的可怕。突然,天空中出现了巨大的血红色漩涡,只持续了几秒的时间,血红色漩涡消失的无影无踪谁也没有注意到从漩涡中坠落的两位少年
  • 中藏经

    中藏经

    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。
  • 阴仙

    阴仙

    魂为阴,魄为阳,气练命,法练性。阴神神游在外,屯阴元,练阴功。气功练炁强身,淬皮肉,锻筋骨。韩王府的一个小小下人,身怀少阴卷,梦谙七星,意外入道。而后性命兼顾,灵肉同修,一步步成为强者。替天行道,改朝换代;九合诸侯,更人易世;削藩王,伐四夷,征八荒,鼎立天下,官拜太师。最后功达武神,成就阴仙!
  • 窘迫的青春

    窘迫的青春

    来到异乡之后,长久的孤独感使我很快适应一个人的生活,可我依然会在夜深人静的时候想起家里的一切,我发现对于一个受惯了羞辱和白眼的屌丝来说,最痛苦的事莫过于连唯一能够容纳自己的家都不能回去,那是一种正真让人感到没有了一丁点儿办法的绝望。有一天,我半夜梦醒,突然发现脸上有泪珠在流,我不知道因何如此?我辗转反侧难以入眠,我想起这些年狗血的经历,不可谓之不疯狂,于是决定在排斥孤独感的同时写一本类似自传体的小说。一半是真实,一半是虚构,也许热血的青春都这样......