登陆注册
15458400000052

第52章 CHAPTER XV(1)

When June Came "Methought I met a Damsel Fair And tears were in her eyes;Her head and arms were bare, I heard her bursting sighs.

"I stopp'd and looked her in the face, `Twas then she sweetly smiled.

Her features shone with mournful grace, Far more than Nature's child.

"With diffident and downcast eye, In modest tones she spoke;She wiped a tear and gave a sigh, And then her silence broke--"

So sang Mrs. Tanberry at the piano, relieving the melancholy which possessed her; but Nelson, pausing in the hail to listen, and exceedingly curious concerning the promised utterance of the Damsel Fair, was to suffer disappointment, as the ballad was broken off abruptly and the songstress closed the piano with a monstrous clatter. Little doubt may be entertained that the noise was designed to disturb Mr. Carewe, who sat upon the veranda consulting a brown Principe, and less that the intended insult was accomplished. For an expression of a vindictive nature was precipitated in that quarter so simultaneously that the bang of the piano- lid and the curse were even as the report of a musket and the immediate cry of the wounded.

Mrs. Tanberry at once debouched upon the piazza, showing a vast, clouded countenance. "And I hope to heaven you already had a headache!" she exclaimed.

"The courtesy of your wish, madam," Carewe replied, with an angry flash of his eye, "is only equaled by the kindness of heaven in answering it. I have, in fact, a headache. I always have, nowadays."

"That's good news," returned the lady heartily.

"I thank you," retorted her host.

"Perhaps if you treated your daughter even a decent Indian's kind of politeness, you'd enjoy better health."

"Ah! And in what failure to perform my duty toward her have I incurred your displeasure?"

"Where is she now?" exclaimed the other excitably. "Where is she now?"

"I cannot say."

"Yes, you can, Robert Carewe!" Mrs. Tanberry retorted, with a wrathful gesture. "You know well enough she's in her own room, and so do I--for I tried to get in to comfort her when I heard her crying. She's in there with the door bolted, where you drove her!"

"I drove her!" he sneered.

"Yes, you did, and I heard you. Do you think I couldn't hear you raging and storming at her like a crazy man? When you get in a temper do you dream there's a soul in the neighborhood who doesn't know it? You're a fool if you do, because they could have heard you swearing down on Main Street, if they'd listened. What are you trying to do to her?--break her spirit?--or what? Because you'll do it, or kill her. I never heard anybody cry so heart-brokenly." Here the good woman's own eyes filled.

"What's the use of pretending?" she went on sorrowfully. "You haven't spoken to her kindly since you came home. Do you suppose I'm blind to that? You weren't a bad husband to the poor child's mother; why can't you be a good father to her?"

"Perhaps you might begin by asking her to be a good daughter to me."

"What has she done?"

"The night before I went away she ran to a fire and behaved there like a common street hoyden. The ladies of the Carewe family have not formerly acquired a notoriety of that kind."

"Bah!" said Mrs. Tanberry.

"The next morning, when I taxed her with it, she dutifully defied and insulted me."

"I can imagine the delicacy with which you `taxed' her. What has that to do with your devilish tantrums of this afternoon, Robert Carewe?"

"I am obliged to you for the expression," he returned. "When I came home, this afternoon, I found her reading that thing." He pointed to many very small fragments of Mr. Cummings's newspaper, which were scattered about the lawn near the veranda. "She was out here, reading an article which I had read downtown and which appeared in a special edition of that rotten sheet, sent out two hours ago."

"Well?"

"Do you know what that article was, madam, do you know what it was?"

Although breathing heavily, Mr. Carewe had compelled himself to a certain outward calmness, but now, in the uncontrollable agitation of his anger, he sprang to his feet and struck one of the wooden pillars of the porch a shocking blow with the bare knuckles of his clenched hand. "Do you know what it was? It was a eulogy of that damned Vanrevel! It pretended to be an account of the enrollment of his infernal company, but it was nothing more than a glorification of that nigger-loving hound! His company--a lot of sneaks, who'll run like sheep from the first Greaser--elected him captain yesterday, and today he received an appointment as major! It dries the blood in my veins to think of it!--that black dog a major! Good God! am I never to hear the last of him? Cummings wrote it, the fool, the lying, fawning, slobbering fool; he ought to be shot for it! Neither he nor his paper ever enter my doors again! And I took the dirty sheet from her hands and tore it to pieces--"

"Yes," interposed Mrs. Tanberry, "it looks as if you had done it with your teeth."

"--And stamped it into the ground!"

"Oh, I heard you!" she said.

Carewe came close to her, and gave her a long look from such bitter eyes that her own fell before them. "If you've been treacherous to me, Jane Tanberry," he said, "then God punish you! If they've met--my daughter and that man--while I was away, it is on your head. I don't ask you, because I believe if you knew anything you'd lie for her sake. But I tell you that as she read that paper, she did not hear my step on the walk nor know that I was there until I leaned over her shoulder. And I swear that I suspect her."

He turned and walked to the door, while the indomitable Mrs. Tanberry, silenced for once, sank into the chair he had vacated. Before he disap- peared within the house, he paused.

"If Mr. Vanrevel has met my daughter," he said, in a thick voice, stretching out both hands in a strange, menacing gesture toward the town that lay darkling in the growing dusk, "if he has addressed one word to her, or so much as allowed his eyes to rest on her overlong, let him take care of himself!"

同类推荐
  • 三洞珠囊

    三洞珠囊

    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。
  • 太上灵宝净明飞仙度人经法释例

    太上灵宝净明飞仙度人经法释例

    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。
  • 伤寒论注

    伤寒论注

    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。
  • 维摩疏释前小序抄

    维摩疏释前小序抄

    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。
  • 翻梵语

    翻梵语

    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
  • 妖媚君主:惹火小丑后

    妖媚君主:惹火小丑后

    药理博士一朝穿越成为绝世丑后,腹黑老公重金悬赏,洞房花烛夜,新婚蜜月期,众多美男走马观花,苦着脸进去,滋润着出来,她,丑后,到底有多大的魅力,有人爱她如痴,有人厌她如敝,且看看她翻云覆雨等闲之间,惊艳天下。
  • 破虚碎空

    破虚碎空

    一盏神奇的古灯,一个穿越了的特种兵,惊天动地的秘闻,光怪陆离的传说,是虚幻还是真实,面对处处可见的杀机,张战无法逃避,只能战!战!战!神秘的远古地宫,从天而降的通天浮屠,天空中的城堡,沉入海底的大陆,破虚碎空带你穿越万古,揭秘神话。
  • 娇妻出逃:总裁大人你别追

    娇妻出逃:总裁大人你别追

    父亲欠下巨债,走投无路之际,她与顾家签下卖身契。初到顾家,她披上婚纱,迎来了一场没有新郎的婚礼。他大病初愈,娇妻却不知所踪。他发誓一定要将不听话的小妻子抓回来,好好“修理”一番。
  • 狂战之神

    狂战之神

    战家大少战狂因一夜之梦,战狂的一生因此而改变……大千世界,任我横扫,谁也无法阻我!我,就是…战狂!我虽狂,但狂的自在逍遥!哈哈哈哈!!!—战狂
  • 噬人法则

    噬人法则

    送一瓶酱油,差点丢掉我的小命。一个叫CK的组织不卖内裤,而是违法集团,他们抓住了我,从此我生活在了死亡的边缘。为了生存,人开始“吃人”算计,拼杀,出卖,甚至背叛……我只想活着,活着就是我唯一的法则!
  • 佛说大乘流转诸有经

    佛说大乘流转诸有经

    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。
  • 宇宙震颤者

    宇宙震颤者

    广阔无垠的空间,瑰丽奇幻的星辰,稀奇古怪的生命,这是一片伟大的宇宙,神迹宇宙。神迹宇宙中,无数的高等智慧种族在为生存的权利而斗争。在这个最华丽的舞台上,凶悍的星际巨舰,强大的战争机甲,诡异的超级武装,神奇的能量枪械······在黑暗的幕布前交织成无比壮丽震撼的画面。漫长的蛰伏后,人族开始变得强大,大崛起时代的序幕缓缓拉开。秦之阳,炎金族人,会狡猾多变,能装傻充愣,并拥有十分诡异的天赋能力,分解吞噬不同的物体与能量!当秦之阳带着不灭的意志一头扎入时代的洪流中,一段震颤宇宙的传奇开始了······
  • 商御天下

    商御天下

    他生在山村,却是豪门遗子;他身具异能,却从不欺凌弱小;他生活放荡不羁,却对所爱的人呵护备至;掌控那富可敌国的财团,在这个纷繁的世界创造属于自己的王国。
  • 双生少女.彼岸花开,悠悠千年

    双生少女.彼岸花开,悠悠千年

    一对双生少女无聊之下闯进陌影男校,随着接二连三的事情的波澜起伏,她们的身份是会曝光,还是,那隐藏在平静下的秘密,会揭开幕布……
  • 闪击鏖战(第二次世界大战史丛书)

    闪击鏖战(第二次世界大战史丛书)

    德国在法、比、荷的胜利,不仅将英国的势力逐出西欧,同时也大大地削弱它在东南欧的影响。东南欧诸国在现代军备方面都很落后,因此竭力避免与这个欧洲大陆的头号军事强国发生冲突。匈牙利、保加利亚、罗马尼亚等巴尔干国家间的紧张关系,因德意两国(没有苏联参加)于1940年8月30日在维也纳强行裁决而趋于缓和。这个裁决使罗马尼亚损失最大。尽管如此,它却寻求和德国建立更加亲密的关系。这是因为它清楚地认识到由于英国在欧洲大陆的势力已不复存在,德国便成了能保卫它的剩余领土和对付苏俄威胁的唯一强国。希特勒准备在一定程度上满足罗马尼亚的愿望,因为首先他对普洛耶什蒂油田感兴趣,德国继续作战的能力在很大程度上就是要依赖它。