登陆注册
15479600000003

第3章 A MERCURY OF THE FOOT-HILLS(3)

But Leonidas was not spared any further allusion to the fair stranger; for the fact of her having spoken to him was duly reported at home, and at dinner his reticence was again sorely attacked. "Just like her, in spite of all her airs and graces, to hang out along the fence like any ordinary hired girl, jabberin' with anybody that went along the road," said his mother incisively.

He knew that she didn't like her new neighbors, so this did not surprise nor greatly pain him. Neither did the prosaic facts that were now first made plain to him. His divinity was a Mrs.

Burroughs, whose husband was conducting a series of mining operations, and prospecting with a gang of men on the Casket Ridge.

As his duty required his continual presence there, Mrs. Burroughs was forced to forego the civilized pleasures of San Francisco for a frontier life, for which she was ill fitted, and in which she had no interest. All this was a vague irrelevance to Leonidas, who knew her only as a goddess in white who had been familiar to him, and kind, and to whom he was tied by the delicious joy of having a secret in common, and having done her a special favor. Healthy youth clings to its own impressions, let reason, experience, and even facts argue ever to the contrary.

So he kept her secret and his intact, and was rewarded a few days afterwards by a distant view of her walking in the garden, with a man whom he recognized as her husband. It is needless to say that, without any extraneous thought, the man suffered in Leonidas's estimation by his propinquity to the goddess, and that he deemed him vastly inferior.

It was a still greater reward to his fidelity that she seized an opportunity when her husband's head was turned to wave her hand to him. Leonidas did not approach the fence, partly through shyness and partly through a more subtle instinct that this man was not in the secret. He was right, for only the next day, as he passed to the post-office, she called him to the fence.

"Did you see me wave my hand to you yesterday?" she asked pleasantly.

"Yes, ma'am; but"--he hesitated--"I didn't come up, for I didn't think you wanted me when any one else was there."

She laughed merrily, and lifting his straw hat from his head, ran the fingers of the other hand through his damp curls. "You're the brightest, dearest boy I ever knew, Leon," she said, dropping her pretty face to the level of his own, "and I ought to have remembered it. But I don't mind telling you I was dreadfully frightened lest you might misunderstand me and come and ask for another letter--before HIM." As she emphasized the personal pronoun, her whole face seemed to change: the light of her blue eyes became mere glittering points, her nostrils grew white and contracted, and her pretty little mouth seemed to narrow into a straight cruel line, like a cat's. "Not a word ever to HIM, of all men! Do you hear?" she said almost brusquely. Then, seeing the concern in the boy's face, she laughed, and added explanatorily:

"He's a bad, bad man, Leon, remember that."

The fact that she was speaking of her husband did not shock the boy's moral sense in the least. The sacredness of those relations, and even of blood kinship, is, I fear, not always so clear to the youthful mind as we fondly imagine. That Mr. Burroughs was a bad man to have excited this change in this lovely woman was Leonidas's only conclusion. He remembered how his sister's soft, pretty little kitten, purring on her lap, used to get its back up and spit at the postmaster's yellow hound.

"I never wished to come unless you called me first," he said frankly.

"What?" she said, in her half playful, half reproachful, but wholly caressing way. "You mean to say you would never come to see me unless I sent for you? Oh, Leon! and you'd abandon me in that way?"

But Leonidas was set in his own boyish superstition. "I'd just delight in being sent for by you any time, Mrs. Burroughs, and you kin always find me," he said shyly, but doggedly; "but"-- He stopped.

"What an opinionated young gentleman! Well, I see I must do all the courting. So consider that I sent for you this morning. I've got another letter for you to mail." She put her hand to her breast, and out of the pretty frillings of her frock produced, as before, with the same faint perfume of violets, a letter like the first. But it was unsealed. "Now, listen, Leon; we are going to be great friends--you and I." Leonidas felt his cheeks glowing.

"You are going to do me another great favor, and we are going to have a little fun and a great secret all by our own selves. Now, first, have you any correspondent--you know--any one who writes to you--any boy or girl--from San Francisco?"

Leonidas's cheeks grew redder--alas! from a less happy consciousness.

He never received any letters; nobody ever wrote to him. He was obliged to make this shameful admission.

Mrs. Burroughs looked thoughtful. "But you have some friend in San Francisco--some one who MIGHT write to you?" she suggested pleasantly.

"I knew a boy once who went to San Francisco," said Leonidas doubtfully. "At least, he allowed he was goin' there."

"That will do," said Mrs. Burroughs. "I suppose your parents know him or of him?"

"Why," said Leonidas, "he used to live here."

"Better still. For, you see, it wouldn't be strange if he DID write. What was the gentleman's name?"

"Jim Belcher," returned Leonidas hesitatingly, by no means sure that the absent Belcher knew how to write. Mrs. Burroughs took a tiny pencil from her belt, opened the letter she was holding in her hand, and apparently wrote the name in it. Then she folded it and sealed it, smiling charmingly at Leonidas's puzzled face.

"Now, Leon, listen; for here is the favor I am asking. Mr. Jim Belcher"--she pronounced the name with great gravity--"will write to you in a few days. But inside of YOUR letter will be a little note to me, which you will bring me. You can show your letter to your family, if they want to know who it is from; but no one must see MINE. Can you manage that?"

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • The Belgian Twins

    The Belgian Twins

    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。
  • 食霸天下

    食霸天下

    以前我除了做家务,最大的爱好就是吃了,没想到后也能靠着这个安身立命,穿越之神真是设想周到!只是身在奴籍、、、这个,为了自由而奋斗吧!
  • 虚城幻国

    虚城幻国

    小说由一叶枯城,一花落城,一梦悠城,一冥伤城,一纸虚城,一絮飘城,一烛幻城,一沙荒城,一水清城、一曲孤城、理想之城,希望之城12个故事组成。小说主人工孟夫出生一世袭丞相家庭,以后会子承父业成为一名丞相。他的父亲是名军国主义者,策划对央国发动一场侵略战争,以使自己的国家成为世界顶级强国。可是孟夫却是个单纯善良的人,也是个厌战者,他不想继承家里的世袭丞相爵位,更不希望自己的国家与邻国开战。他的梦想是成为一名作家,用美好的故事感动众生。他经常进入一些幻想的世界,在那些天马行空的世界里经历一场又一场悲欢离合。
  • 泪无痕乱君心

    泪无痕乱君心

    盛世王妃,美貌无双,才华横溢,迷倒邪魅王爷。
  • 墨染盛夏

    墨染盛夏

    自小缺爹少娘的夏墨染从没想过自己会得老天的眷顾,可这一朝醒来竟也穿越到了异界;于是,炼丹、修仙、收割美男,嘿嘿~~~一个都不能少!
  • 重刊汾阳和尚语录

    重刊汾阳和尚语录

    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。
  • 九泉归来

    九泉归来

    三万年前,他被誉为星空下第一强者,却在众叛亲离之下含恨埋骨。一万年前,他成为这片沃土上唯一一名帝君,却在外族的侵略之下国破身亡。五千年前,他带领人类重新成为这个世界的主宰,却在破境之时走火入魔,身死道消。……历经九世风雨,数万年光景,当人类文明再度开始轮回,夏生终于又一次睁开了双眼。这一次,在他的灵魂深处,已经赫然多了八口无上灵泉。碧落黄泉可淬体,藏锋暗泉可炼器,无垢青泉可养生……当我归来之时,城若阻我,我便拆了那城。圣若拦我,我便宰了那圣!******************书友群:27144120,书荒的朋友可以前往一观莫语上一部作品:《文圣天下》
  • 女人村

    女人村

    云南某地的诡异习俗,村子里的女人会用残忍方式……我能逃得掉吗……
  • 天降杀手小姐:姐不是废柴

    天降杀手小姐:姐不是废柴

    她是21世纪孤狼组织中的顶级杀手之一,代号ks,却没想到穿越到了一个小孩身上,而且还走起了废柴流,你说什么?她是废物,无灵根?拜托,你是不是脑子有坑啊,姐这是传说中的什么系都可以修炼的天才啊!你说什么?她是废物,你才是天才?拜托,你是不是脑子被驴踢了啊,你那叫天才,我看是天生的废材、天天被人踩吧!姐这就让你看看,什么叫真正的天才!你说什么?她没权势,没后台?拜托,你眼睛是不是瞎了啊,姐可是有后台的,至于什么具体的,快点给我点击【立即阅读】,然后再【加入书架】,至于其他的么……嘿嘿,你自己看着办吧。
  • 风爵城主

    风爵城主

    【当人类来到一片陌生之地】拼上我们的热血,为的仅仅是那带着尊严的人类生存之处。机缘巧合下回到地球的易岳知道,这最多不过是一段时间不长的喘息,随时随地,下一次的黑色天坑将会来临,而最终……感谢阅文书评团提供书评支持!