登陆注册
19856100000099

第99章

He tried to imagine himself lecturing, canvassing for books or insurance policies, writing for newspapers--and remained frightened.But suddenly one day it occurred to him that these qualms and forebodings were sheer folly.

Was not Celia rich? Would she not with lightning swiftness draw forth that check-book, like the flashing sword of a champion from its scabbard, and run to his relief? Why, of course.

It was absurd not to have thought of that before.

He recalled her momentary anger with him, that afternoon in the woods, when he had cried out that discovery would mean ruin to him.He saw clearly enough now that she had been grieved at his want of faith in her protection.

In his flurry of fright, he had lost sight of the fact that, if exposure and trouble came to him, she would naturally feel that she had been the cause of his martyrdom.

It was plain enough now.If he got into hot water, it would be solely on account of his having been seen with her.He had walked into the woods with her--"the further the better" had been her own words--out of pure kindliness, and the desire to lead her away from the scene of her brother's and her own humiliation.

But why amplify arguments? Her own warm heart would tell her, on the instant, how he had been sacrificed for her sake, and would bring her, eager and devoted, to his succor.

That was all right, then.Slowly, from this point, suggestions expanded themselves.The future could be, if he willed it, one long serene triumph of love, and lofty intellectual companionship, and existence softened and enriched at every point by all that wealth could command, and the most exquisite tastes suggest.

Should he will it! Ah! the question answered itself.

But he could not enter upon this beckoning heaven of a future until he had freed himself.When Celia said to him, "Come!" he must not be in the position to reply, "I should like to, but unfortunately I am tied by the leg."He should have to leave Octavius, leave the ministry, leave everything.He could not begin too soon to face these contingencies.

Very likely Celia had not thought it out as far as this.

With her, it was a mere vague "sometime I may."But the harder masculine sense, Theron felt, existed for the very purpose of correcting and giving point to these loose feminine notions of time and space.

It was for him to clear away the obstacles, and map the plans out with definite decision.

One warm afternoon, as he lolled in his easy-chair under the open window of his study, musing upon the ever-shifting phases of this vast, complicated, urgent problem, some chance words from the sidewalk in front came to his ears, and, coming, remained to clarify his thoughts.

Two ladies whose voices were strange to him had stopped--as so many people almost daily stopped--to admire the garden of the parsonage.One of them expressed her pleasure in general terms.Said the other--"My husband declares those dahlias alone couldn't be matched for thirty dollars, and that some of those gladiolus must have cost three or four dollars apiece.

I know we've spent simply oceans of money on our garden, and it doesn't begin to compare with this.""It seems like a sinful waste to me," said her companion.

"No-o," the other hesitated."No, I don't think quite that--if you can afford it just as well as not.But it does seem to me that I'd rather live in a little better house, and not spend it ALL on flowers.Just LOOK at that cactus!"The voices died away.Theron sat up, with a look of arrested thought upon his face, then sprang to his feet and moved hurriedly through the parlor to an open front window.

Peering out with caution he saw that the two women receding from view were fashionably dressed and evidently came from homes of means.He stared after them in a blank way until they turned a corner.

He went into the hall then, put on his frock-coat and hat, and stepped out into the garden.He was conscious of having rather avoided it heretofore--not altogether without reasons of his own, lying unexamined somewhere in the recesses of his mind.Now he walked slowly about, and examined the flowers with great attentiveness.

The season was advancing, and he saw that many plants had gone out of bloom.But what a magnificent plenitude of blossoms still remained!

Thirty dollars' worth of dahlias--that was what the stranger had said.Theron hardly brought himself to credit the statement;but all the same it was apparent to even his uninformed eye that these huge, imbricated, flowering masses, with their extraordinary half-colors, must be unusual.

He remembered that the boy in Gorringe's office had spoken of just one lot of plants costing thirty-one dollars and sixty cents, and there had been two other lots as well.

The figures remained surprisingly distinct in his memory.

It was no good deceiving himself any longer: of course these were the plants that Gorringe had spent his money upon, here all about him.

As he surveyed them with a sour regard, a cool breeze stirred across the garden.The tall, over-laden flower-spikes of gladioli bent and nodded at him; the hollyhocks and flaming alvias, the clustered blossoms on the standard roses, the delicately painted lilies on their stilt-like stems, fluttered in the wind, and seemed all bowing satirically to him."Yes, Levi Gorringe paid for us!" He almost heard their mocking declaration.

Out in the back-yard, where a longer day of sunshine dwelt, there were many other flowers, and notably a bed of geraniums which literally made the eye ache.Standing at this rear corner of the house, he caught the droning sound of Alice's voice, humming a hymn to herself as she went about her kitchen work.He saw her through the open window.

She was sweeping, and had a sort of cap on her head which did not add to the graces of her appearance.

同类推荐
  • MAGGIE A GIRL OF THE STREETS

    MAGGIE A GIRL OF THE STREETS

    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。
  • 玉燕姻缘全传

    玉燕姻缘全传

    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。
  • 还丹至药篇

    还丹至药篇

    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。
  • 道德经注释

    道德经注释

    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。
  • 郑氏史料初编

    郑氏史料初编

    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
  • Toys of Peace

    Toys of Peace

    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。
  • 王妃自妖娆:废柴不是九小姐

    王妃自妖娆:废柴不是九小姐

    夜家九小姐,天生不能修炼,爹不疼娘不在,被庶姐推下水。再次睁眼,俨然是另一个人——懦弱?治得叔母,打得庶姐,拿得金币,收得主权。废柴?用得魔法,修得灵力,降得神兽,做得仙器。未婚夫?“高否?”“一米八又三。”“富否?”“有座金山。”“帅否?”“像我这样的。”“你这样的?”她上下打量他,“可以考虑。”她心在天涯却为他笑颜如花,他风致淡泊却对她腹黑邪魅。“王爷,臣妾听说二姐在府门口对你死缠烂打摔倒了,你让她进府包扎?”完了,都自称臣妾了,这气的不轻。“爱妃莫动气,我后来不是把她赶出去了嘛。”“你怎么能把她赶出去呢?”“爱妃以为?”“该让人扔出去啊。”“那,我派人重新扔一遍?”“嗯,去吧。”
  • 像雨像云又像风

    像雨像云又像风

    如果说往事如烟似云般地在我们眼前浮过,那么能使我们眼前一亮还没有被我们在岁月所抹去的回忆,恐怕只有那些曾经真正用心用灵魂所记录的往事,那些和他(她)一起走过的岁月,那些像雨,像云,更像风的记忆。
  • 忆之三部曲:忆流年

    忆之三部曲:忆流年

    飘雪凌舞一生醉,惆怅飞絮天涯晦,繁华凋落訫魂溃,唯寄忧怨月下淬。幽月千里忆流年,琴音醉香风引弦,弦断荒年祭乏缘,曲终人散再难全。
  • 妃天下

    妃天下

    慕容璃月穿越到古代,变身慕容国的公主,却遭遇陷害,被人丢弃到靑楼,看她在古代如何逆袭上位。
  • 超级变身术

    超级变身术

    哥会变身术,得罪哥很难过,明天你就会发现自己成了闯女厕所偷窥的变态狂,或者是跪在学校操场唱征服的loser。最狠的是,变成你的样子,去泡你女朋友,哇哈哈哈!
  • 踏天道尊

    踏天道尊

    天地无极逆阴阳,乱天动地镇边荒,仗戟九尺闯三界,登天问道屠仙魔。盘古开天,女娲补天,仙界掌控苍生。浩瀚天威之下,试问谁敢逆天而上。一位天外来客,一道远古传承。终将劈开这天,让一切真相还原天地。
  • 兵武大帝

    兵武大帝

    半块青铜照万古,几经风雨沧海中。一少年,身世离奇,是英雄造时势,还是时势造英雄。王侯一怒,天地皆变,亿万生灵泣,只为争那永恒皇座。一席白衣染血,伐诸王,战绝仙,何处是他的归路。一切只是为了回家。
  • 二部僧授戒仪式

    二部僧授戒仪式

    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。
  • 神秘三大贵族

    神秘三大贵族

    神秘的三个贵族,还有十二贵族,这场游戏,谁胜谁败?