登陆注册
37836100000027

第27章 XII.(1)

Clementina did not sleep till well toward morning, and she was still sleeping when Mrs. Atwell knocked and called in to her that her brother Jim wanted to see her. She hurried down, and in the confusion of mind left over from the night before she cooed sweetly at Jim as if he had been Mr. Gregory, "What is it, Jim? What do you want me for?"

The boy answered with the disgust a sister's company manners always rouse in a brother. "Motha wants you. Says she's wo'ked down, and she wants you to come and help." Then he went his way.

Mrs. Atwell was used to having help snatched from her by their families at a moment's notice. "I presume you've got to go, Clem," she said.

"Oh, yes, I've got to go," Clementina assented, with a note of relief which mystified Mrs. Atwell.

"You tied readin' to Mr. Milray?"

"Oh, no'm-no, I mean. But I guess I betta go home. I guess I've been away long enough."

"Well, you're a good gul, Clem. I presume your motha's got a right to have you home if she wants you." Clementina said nothing to this, but turned briskly, and started upstairs toward her room again. The landlady called after her, "Shall you speak to Mis' Milray, or do you want I should?"

Clementina looked back at her over her shoulder to warble, "Why, if you would, Mrs. Atwell," and kept on to her room.

Mrs. Milray was not wholly sorry to have her go; she was going herself very soon, and Clementina's earlier departure simplified the question of getting rid of her; but she overwhelmed her with reproaches which Clementina received with such sweet sincerity that another than Mrs.

Milray might have blamed herself for having abused her ingenuousness.

The Atwells could very well have let the girl walk home, but they sent her in a buckboard, with one of the stablemen to drive her. The landlord put her neat bundle under the seat of the buckboard with his own hand.

There was something in the child's bearing, her dignity and her amiability, which made people offer her, half in fun, and half in earnest, the deference paid to age and state.

She did not know whether Gregory would try to see her before she went.

She thought he must have known she was going, but since he neither came to take leave of her, nor sent her any message, she decided that she had not expected him to do so. About the third week of September she heard that he had left Middlemount and gone back to college.

She kept at her work in the house and helped her mother, and looked after the little ones; she followed her father in the woods, in his quest of stuff for walking sticks, and advised with both concerning the taste of summer folks in dress and in canes. The winter came, and she read many books in its long leisure, mostly novels, out of the rector's library.

He had a whole set of Miss Edgeworth, and nearly all of Miss Austen and Miss Gurney, and he gave of them to Clementina, as the best thing for her mind as well as her morals; he believed nothing could be better for any one than these old English novels, which he had nearly forgotten in their details. She colored the faded English life of the stories afresh from her Yankee circumstance; and it seemed the consensus of their testimony that she had really been made love to, and not so very much too soon, at her age of sixteen, for most of their heroines were not much older. The terms of Gregory's declaration and of its withdrawal were mystifying, but not more mystifying than many such things, and from what happened in the novels she read, the affair might be trusted to come out all right of itself in time. She was rather thoughtfuller for it, and once her mother asked her what was the matter with her. "Oh, I guess I'm getting old, motha," she said, and turned the question off. She would not have minded telling her mother about Gregory, but it would not have been the custom; and her mother would have worried, and would have blamed him. Clementina could have more easily trusted her father with the case, but so far as she knew fathers never were trusted with anything of the kind. She would have been willing that accident should bring it to the knowledge of Mrs.

Richling; but the moment never came when she could voluntarily confide in her, though she was a great deal with her that winter. She was Mrs.

Richling's lieutenant in the social affairs of the parish, which the rector's wife took under her care. She helped her get up entertainments of the kind that could be given in the church parlor, and they managed together some dances which had to be exiled to the town hall. They contrived to make the young people of the village feel that they were having a gay time, and Clementina did not herself feel that it was a dull one. She taught them some of the new steps and figures which the help used to pick up from the summer folks at the Middlemount, and practise together; she liked doing that; her mother said the child would rather dance than eat, any time. She was never sad, but so much dignity got into her sweetness that the rector now and then complained of feeling put down by her.

She did not know whether she expected Gregory to write to her or not; but when no letters came she decided that she had not expected them. She wondered if he would come back to the Middlemount the next summer; but when the summer came, she heard that they had another student in his place. She heard that they had a new clerk, and that the boarders were not so pleasant. Another year passed, and towards the end of the season Mrs. Atwell wished her to come and help her again, and Clementina went over to the hotel to soften her refusal. She explained that her mother had so much sewing now that she could not spare her; and Mrs. Atwell said: Well, that was right, and that she must be the greatest kind of dependence for her mother. "You ah' going on seventeen this year, ain't you?"

"I was nineteen the last day of August," said Clementina, and Mrs. Atwell sighed, and said, How the time did fly.

同类推荐
  • 直隶河渠志

    直隶河渠志

    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。
  • 曹家档案史料

    曹家档案史料

    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。
  • 杨炯诗全集

    杨炯诗全集

    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。
  • 阿毗达磨俱舍论

    阿毗达磨俱舍论

    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。
  • 太上混元老子史略

    太上混元老子史略

    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
  • 穿越千年前的修仙世界

    穿越千年前的修仙世界

    在广阔的天元大陆,修仙早已经不再普遍,而科技日异万像,人们也越来越适应这种生活。而有种势力却想摧毁这一切!新书等级制度:练气、结丹、元灵、升灵、悟灵、天元、至尊、半仙、天仙
  • 邪魅王爷的爆笑萌妃

    邪魅王爷的爆笑萌妃

    好吧,她非常非常非常狗血的穿越了,而且还穿越到一个有爹娘疼有哥哥爱的千金身上,对于她这个21世纪天才美少女来说并不算什么,只要有帅哥给她看,有钱给她花就行了!就因为在家无聊偷跑出去晃悠一下,结果就被扣上逃婚的罪名,最后还呗什么第一侍卫当街扛回来,太丢人了!于是她嫁过去的第一天就把他的王府搞得鸡飞狗跳。一个邪魅王爷,一个冷酷侍卫,还有一个神秘的陌生人,恩,选哪一个呢?还是全部都要呢?
  • 萤火之语

    萤火之语

    以短诗或者短篇故事记录自己的生活点滴,并从其中感悟人生。
  • 倾于你卿心于你

    倾于你卿心于你

    她,为江湖上赫赫有名的医药世家倾世宫的小少宫主,却毫无心眼,天真烂漫;他,为落难公子,却城府极深,权衡利弊。她不会知道,她会爱上他,既已知道了,就逃避不了。我既敢爱你,便无所畏惧!我既敢爱你,便愿舍弃天下!我既敢爱你,便愿为你手摘星辰!我既敢爱你,便不负芳心!那年,她二十,他二十一。她喜欢上他,他爱上她。一切都刚刚好!
  • 废材逆袭:邪王的倾城腹黑妻

    废材逆袭:邪王的倾城腹黑妻

    她,是二十一世纪的魁魅杀手!代号罂粟,看似妖娆美丽,却是心狠手辣,手段多的让人惊悚!因为一颗海里的彩色小珍珠,穿越到了异世大陆——曦和大陆!废材?就算我在这异世,不算天才,但是好歹我在地球混的也不错吧?我怎么可能是废材呢,我当然是天才是鬼才中的鬼才!!哼,那些敢欺负我的人,我要你们……我魁魅杀手的手段会少吗?我可不但拥有全系幻力,炼丹炼器,什么的对我还是小菜一碟,我那神女母亲留下财富,更是多的不得了!!什么空间啊,什么神器呀……我那神秘的爹爹更是……
  • 倾世神话

    倾世神话

    我们不断的用知识去丰盈,充沛自己的内心,最后,你认知到了骄傲自满的缺陷,于是你学会了自谦低调;你认知到了道德伦理的尺度,于是你学会了原则礼法;你认知到了自由的局限,于是你学会了对自由的把握;你认知到了苦难挫折的必然,于是学会了坚韧坦然的面对;你认知了仁义礼智信,于是学会诚实敬重。十年生死两茫茫,不思量,自难忘!亲情,爱情,友情,生死,苦难,分离......这是一个大世!我若要有,天不可无!这是一个地球男人在异世界创造倾世神话的故事!——>倾世神话读者群129702600讨论剧情哦!
  • 恶魔校草:丫头,你很强势

    恶魔校草:丫头,你很强势

    小说写成什么样,就怎么发展下去吧,剧情还没有想好,有想法的小可爱可以到评论区里写下你的想法。
  • 末世之女皇的崛起

    末世之女皇的崛起

    新书【为啥我每次穿越都是反派】4月1号首发起点,希望大家帮忙支持一下。(此文无cp,无cp,无cp,重要的事情说三遍。)穿越女:“我要风生水起。”重生女:“我要复仇,我要活得精彩。”叶云:“我安静的看着你们,就是动个手而已。”末日群魔乱舞,且看叶云如何搞定这群人
  • 醉花谣之绮罗梦:花见羞传

    醉花谣之绮罗梦:花见羞传

    英雄起于乱世,美女长伴英雄。--------------------------那年华灯夜阑珊,情愫暗生,暗将心托付;弹指一瞬失流年,旧人难见,幽幽叹无缘;情丝难辨缕缕缠,绮罗梦中,公子如初见。多想不顾一切去拥住你,可惜我们之间隔了千山万水,多想向你诉说情衷,可是却没有勇气。
  • 谁的青春会平凡

    谁的青春会平凡

    青春,就像秋天…落叶飘下,慢慢迟暮…我们就像河流,都会慢慢的,随波逐流。