登陆注册
14811300000003

第3章

I confess," he said gravely, "I can't always follow your unsteady little ideas when you talk. They frisk about so. It is the difference probably between the man's mind and the woman's. Besides, we have been separated for so many years! But I soon will understand you. I know that while you keep yourself apart from all the world you open your heart to me.""Wrap the rug about my feet, George," she said hastily, and then sent him away upon an errand, looking after him uneasily.

It was very pleasant to hear her boy thus formally sum up his opinion of her. But when he found that it was based upon a lie?

For Frances, candid enough to the world, had deceived her son ever since he was born.

George had always believed that she had inherited a fortune from his father. It gave solidity and comfort to his life to think of her in the stately old mansion on the shores of Delaware Bay, with nothing to do except to be beautiful and gracious, as befitted a well-born woman.

It pleased him, in a lofty, generous way, that his father (whom she had taught him to reverence as the most chivalric of gentlemen) had left him wholly dependent upon her. It was a legal fiction, of course. He was the heir--the crown prince. He had always been liberally supplied with money at school and at Harvard. Her income was large. No doubt the dear soul mismanaged the estates fearfully, but now he would have leisure to take care of them.

Now, the fact was that Colonel Waldeaux had been a drunken spendthrift who had left nothing. The house and farm always had belonged to his wife. She had supported George by her own work all of his life. She could not save money, but she had the rarer faculty of making it.

She had raised fine fruit and flowers for the Philadelphia market; she had traded in high breeds of poultry and cattle, and had invested her earnings shrewdly. With these successes she had been able to provide George with money to spend freely at college.

She lived scantily at home, never expecting any luxury or great pleasure to come into her own life.

But two years ago a queer thing had happened to her. In an idle hour she wrote a comical squib and sent it to a New York paper. As everybody knows, fun, even vulgar fun, sells high in the market. Her fun was not vulgar, but coarse and biting enough to tickle the ears of the common reader. The editor offered her a salary equal to her whole income for a weekly column of such fooling.

She had hoarded every penny of this money. With it she meant to pay her expenses in Europe and to support George in his year at Oxford. The work and the salary were to go on while she was gone.

It was easy enough to hide all of these things from her son while he was in Cambridge and she in Delaware. But now? What if he should find out that his mother was the Quigg" of the New York ----, a paper which he declared to be unfit for a gentleman to read?

She was looking out to sea and thinking of this when her cousin, Miss Vance, came up to her. Miss Vance was a fashionable teacher in New York, who was going to spend a year abroad with two wealthy pupils. She was a thin woman, quietly dressed; white hair and black brows, with gold eye-glasses bridging an aquiline nose, gave her a commanding, inquisitorial air.

"Well, Frances!" she began briskly, "I have not had time before to attend to you. Are your bags hung in your stateroom?""I haven't been down yet," said Mrs. Waldeaux meekly.

"We were watching the fog in the sun."

"Fog! Mercy on me! You know you may be ill any minute, and your room not ready! Of course, you did not take the bromides that I sent you a week ago?

"No, Clara."

Miss Vance glanced at her. "Well, just as you please.

I've done what I could. Let me look at your itinerary.

You will be too ill for me to advise you about it later.""Oh, we made none!" said George gayly, coming up to his mother's aid. "We are going to be vagabonds, and have no plans. Mother's soul draws us to York Cathedral, and mine to the National Gallery. That is all we know.""I thought you had given up that whim of being an artist?" said Miss Vance, sharply facing on him.

Young Waldeaux reddened. "Yes, I have given it up. Iknow as well as you do that I have no talent. I am going to study my profession at Oxford, and earn my bread by it.""Quite right. You never would earn it by art," she said decisively. "How long do you stay in York, Frances?""Oh, a day, or a month--or--years, as we please," said Frances, lazily turning her head away. She wanted to set Clara Vance down in her proper place. Mrs. Waldeaux abhorred cousinly intimates--people who run into your back door to pry into the state of your larder or your income. But Miss Vance, as Frances knew, unfortunately held a key to her back door. She knew of George's wretched daubs, and his insane desire, when he was a boy, to study art. He gave it up years ago. Why should she nag him now about it? By virtue of her relationship she knew, too, all of Mrs. Waldeaux's secrets. It was most unfortunate that she should have chosen to sail on this vessel.

"Well, mother," George said, uneasy to get away, "no doubt Miss Vance is right. We should set things in order. I am going now to give my letter of credit to the purser to lock up; shall I take yours?"Mrs. Waldeaux did not reply at once. "No," she said at last. "I like to carry my own purse."He smiled indulgently as on a child. "Of course, dear.

It IS your own. My father was wise in that. But, on this journey, I can act as your paymaster, can't I? Ihave studied foreign money----"

"We shall see. I can keep it as safe as any purser now,"she said, obstinately shaking her head.

He laughed and walked away.

"You have not told him, then?" demanded Clara.

"No. And I never will. I will not hurt the boy by letting him know that his mother has supported him, and remember, Clara, that he can only hear it through you.

Nobody knows that I am `Quigg' but you."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 寂静城

    寂静城

    爱情,在现实里永远都是那么缥缈难觅;缘分,仅仅只是一场偶然的邂逅。一座寂静的城市,一段寂静的爱情。如果说有命中注定,我想所有经历都只是一个圈,结局早已在开头就已注定。倘若你真的不愿意,我可以不爱你,因为我可以孤单到底。
  • 羽绒泪

    羽绒泪

    她,原本是一个普普通通的学生,却因命运的侵袭,改变了她一生的道路,她身带异能,却没能护住自己的家人,她聪明绝顶,却没有想到自己会遭到背叛,她倾国倾城,却不能与她相爱的人白头到老,她千防万防,最终还是掉入了那人的陷阱,当这一切终于真相大白时,她才知道自己犯了多么严重的错误,那是她一生都无法弥补的错误。他是她从前的同学,也是她唯一喜欢过的人,却因仇恨与责任,他与她成为了敌人,谁对谁错?什么叫对什么叫错?他与她最终究竟如何?
  • 高冷校草无限爱

    高冷校草无限爱

    墨对任何人都是冷着一张脸,以至于大家认为他不喜欢女孩,但是他却会对雨轩露出无限的笑容,付出出他对雨轩无限的爱
  • 无敌极品学生

    无敌极品学生

    救下一个美女杀手后,林宇的生活打破了平静。又天降透视眼,林宇开始了潇洒的生活!泡泡女神,踩踩纨绔,生活乐无边!一路嚣张,霸道非常。顺我者生,逆我者亡!
  • 穿越异世:何处是归路

    穿越异世:何处是归路

    再次醒来已身处异世,强者为尊是这个世界的生存法则,是扶摇直上追寻力量,还是沦落尘世甘为凡人。是拼尽全力博一回,还是安于现状泯于众人矣。她的归处又是在何方呢
  • 福妻驾到

    福妻驾到

    现代饭店彪悍老板娘魂穿古代。不分是非的极品婆婆?三年未归生死不明的丈夫?心狠手辣的阴毒亲戚?贪婪而好色的地主老财?吃上顿没下顿的贫困宭境?不怕不怕,神仙相助,一技在手,天下我有!且看现代张悦娘,如何身带福气玩转古代,开面馆、收小弟、左纳财富,右傍美男,共绘幸福生活大好蓝图!!!!快本新书《天媒地聘》已经上架开始销售,只要3.99元即可将整本书抱回家,你还等什么哪,赶紧点击下面的直通车,享受乐乐精心为您准备的美食盛宴吧!)
  • 霸气王妃要逃跑,王爷快跟上

    霸气王妃要逃跑,王爷快跟上

    “报告王爷,王妃又跑了。”侍卫道。“还愣着干什么?快跟上。”骄傲王爷立刻放下茶水,踏上了抓妻之旅。“你们是抓不到我的。”萌系王妃趴在墙头对着王爷吼,一激动就掉下去了。霸气王爷一闪身,接住王妃,轻轻落下:“你跑不掉了。”王妃小脸一红,王爷要不要这么帅?什么鬼?本王妃都不打算逃了,怎么会跑出来一个怀了王爷孩子的正王妃?王妃伤了心,果断地了自己的时空,殊不知,王爷也跟来了。到了异世的王爷一脸迷茫,这里是哪~
  • 初遇之最美不过初相见

    初遇之最美不过初相见

    我只是想做一个普通人,普通的人,可是你们为什么都要这样对我?你们当初为什么要生下我?明明不想要我为什么还要让我生活在这样一个社会里?我求求你们放过我,放过我......——廖小聪
  • 谁人入春风

    谁人入春风

    这个故事里,每个人都有伤痛,但每个人仍然热切的活着;这个故事里,每个人都不完美,但每个人都愿意直面真实;这个故事里,每个人都曾热切地爱过,只不过有人还在爱着,有人却在恨着……这个故事,好像每一个平凡的自己,热情的生活,自私而真切,点燃自己或灼烧自己。
  • 呆萌帝君:妖孽出没请警戒

    呆萌帝君:妖孽出没请警戒

    当生性薄凉,实则逗逼的她穿越到不务正业又好色的皇帝东离烟身上,一场凤唳天下,哦不,是二货无敌的盛世就此开始。某逗逼深感当皇帝太苦逼,她一个小小女子真心受不鸟,这不,她就开始想办法了。片段一“将军,看在我为你解毒的份上,能不能…”“说!”“你当将军估计也腻歪了吧,有没有觉得我这皇位很高端大气上档…”“说人话。”“你有篡位的想法不!”片段二“丞相,你年纪轻轻,才高八斗,博学多才,在同龄人中更是出类拔萃…”“陛下,你到底想说什么?”“嘿嘿,就是问问丞相要不要换个更高的位置坐坐。”片段三“皇儿们,你们有没有兴趣…”“父皇,今天又有什么好玩的。”“额,算了,无事。”劝乃们这些凡人篡位真是路漫漫其修远啊。