It would have been diffic

类别:其他 作者:Jerome Klapka J字数:222更新时间:23/03/02 10:45:37
“You have been misinformed,” assured him the stranger. “I beg your pardon,” said Mr. Augustus Longcord. “It is nothing,” replied the stranger in his sweet low voice, and passed on. “Well what about this theatre,” demanded Mr. Longcord of his friend and partner; “do you want to go or don’t you?” Mr. Longcord was feeling irritable. “Goth the ticketh—may ath well,” thought Isidore. “Damn stupid piece, I’m told.” “Motht of them thupid, more or leth. Pity to wathte the ticketh,” argued Isidore, and the pair went out. “Are you staying long in London?” asked Miss Kite, raising her practised eyes towards the stranger. “Not long,” answered the stranger. “At least I do not know. It depends.” An unusual quiet had invaded the drawing-room of Forty-eight Bloomsbury Square, generally noisy with strident voices about this hour. The Colonel remained engrossed in his paper. Mrs. Devine sat with her plump white hands folded on her lap, whether asleep or not it was impossible to say. The lady who was cousin to a baronet had shifted her chair beneath the gasolier, her eyes bent on her everlasting crochet work. The languid Miss Devine had crossed to the piano, where she sat fingering softly the tuneless keys, her back to the cold barely-furnished room. “Sit down!” commanded saucily Miss Kite, indicating with her fan the vacant seat beside her. “Tell me about yourself. You interest me.” Miss Kite adopted a pretty authoritative air towards all youthful-looking members of the opposite sex. It harmonised with the peach complexion and the golden hair, and fitted her about as well. “I am glad of that,” answered the stranger, taking the chair suggested. “I so wish to interest you.” “You’re a very bold boy.” Miss Kite lowered her fan, for the purpose of glancing archly over the edge of it, and for the first time encountered the eyes of the stranger looking into hers. And then it was that Miss Kite experienced precisely the same curious sensation that an hour or so ago had troubled Mrs. Pennycherry when the stranger had first bowed to her. It seemed to Miss Kite that she was no longer the Miss Kite that, had she risen and looked into it, the fly-blown mirror over the marble mantelpiece would, she knew, have presented to her view; but quite another Miss Kite—a cheerful, bright-eyed lady verging on middle age, yet still good-looking in spite of her faded complexion and somewhat thin brown locks. Miss Kite felt a pang of jealousy shoot through her; this middle-aged Miss Kite seemed, on the whole, a more attractive lady. There was a wholesomeness, a broadmindedness about her that instinctively drew one towards her. Not hampered, as Miss Kite herself was, by the necessity of appearing to be somewhere between eighteen and twenty-two, this other Miss Kite could talk sensibly, even brilliantly: one felt it. A thoroughly “nice” woman this other Miss Kite; the real Miss Kite, though envious, was bound to admit it. Miss Kite wished to goodness she had never seen the woman. The glimpse of her had rendered Miss Kite dissatisfied with herself. “I am not a boy,” explained the stranger; “and I had no intention of being bold.” “I know,” replied Miss Kite. “It was a silly remark. Whatever induced me to make it, I can’t think. Getting foolish in my old age, I suppose.” The stranger laughed. “Surely you are not old.” “I’m thirty-nine,” snapped out Miss Kite. “You don’t call it young?” “I think it a beautiful age,” insisted the stranger; “young enough not to have lost the joy of youth, old enough to have learnt sympathy.” “Oh, I daresay,” returned Miss Kite, “any age you’d think beautiful. I’m going to bed.” Miss Kite rose. The paper fan had somehow got itself broken. She threw the fragments into the fire. “It is early yet,” pleaded the stranger, “I was looking forward to a talk with you.” “Well, you’ll be able to look forward to it,” retorted Miss Kite. “Good-night.” The truth was, Miss Kite was impatient to have a look at herself in the glass, in her own room with the door shut. The vision of that other Miss Kite—the clean-looking lady of the pale face and the brown hair had been so vivid, Miss Kite wondered whether temporary forgetfulness might not have fallen upon her while dressing for dinner that evening. The stranger, left to his own devices, strolled towards the loo table, seeking something to read. “You seem to have frightened away Miss Kite,” remarked the lady who was cousin to a baronet. “It seems so,” admitted the stranger. “My cousin, Sir William Bosster,” observed the crocheting lady, “who married old Lord Egham’s niece—you never met the Eghams?” “Hitherto,” replied the stranger, “I have not had that pleasure.” “A charming family. Cannot understand—my cousin Sir William, I mean, cannot understand my remaining here. ‘My dear Emily’—he says the same thing every time he sees me: ‘My dear Emily, how can you exist among the sort of people one meets with in a boarding-house.’ But they amuse me.” A sense of humour, agreed the stranger, was always of advantage. “Our family on my mother’s side,” continued Sir William’s cousin in her placid monotone, “was connected with the Tatton-Joneses, who when King George the Fourth—” Sir William’s cousin, needing another reel of cotton, glanced up, and met the stranger’s gaze. “I’m sure I don’t know why I’m telling you all this,” said Sir William’s cousin in an irritable tone. “It can’t possibly interest you.” “Everything connected with you interests me,” gravely the stranger assured her. “It is very kind of you to say so,” sighed Sir William’s cousin, but without conviction; “I am afraid sometimes I bore people.” The polite stranger refrained from contradiction. “You see,” continued the poor lady, “I really am of good family.” “Dear lady,” said the stranger, “your gentle face, your gentle voice, your gentle bearing, all proclaim it.” She looked without flinching into the stranger’s eyes, and gradually a smile banished the reigning dulness of her features. “How foolish of me.” She spoke rather to herself than to the stranger. “Why, of course, people—people whose opinion is worth troubling about—judge of you by what you are, not by what you go about saying you are.” The stranger remained silent. “I am the widow of a provincial doctor, with an income of just two hundred and thirty pounds per annum,” she argued. “The sensible thing for me to do is to make the best of it, and to worry myself about these high and mighty relations of mine as little as they have ever worried themselves about me.” The stranger appeared unable to think of anything worth saying. “I have other connections,” remembered Sir William’s cousin; “those of my poor husband, to whom instead of being the ‘poor relation’ I could be the fairy god-mama. They are my people—or would be,” added Sir William’s cousin tartly, “if I wasn’t a vulgar snob.” She flushed the instant she had said the words and, rising, commenced preparations for a hurried departure. “Now it seems I am driving you away,” sighed the stranger. “Having been called a ‘vulgar snob,’” retorted the lady with some heat, “I think it about time I went.” “The words were your own,” the stranger reminded her. “Whatever I may have thought,” remarked the indignant dame, “no lady—least of all in the presence of a total stranger—would have called herself—” The poor dame paused, bewildered. “There is something very curious the matter with me this evening, that I cannot understand,” she explained, “I seem quite unable to avoid insulting myself.” Still surrounded by bewilderment, she wished the stranger good-night, hoping that when next they met she would be more herself. The stranger, hoping so also, opened the door and closed it again behind her. “Tell me,” laughed Miss Devine, who by sheer force of talent was contriving to wring harmony from the reluctant piano, “how did you manage to do it? I should like to know.” “How did I do what?” inquired the stranger. “Contrive to get rid so quickly of those two old frumps?” “How well you play!” observed the stranger. “I knew you had genius for music the moment I saw you.” “How could you tell?” “It is written so clearly in your face.” The girl laughed, well pleased. “You seem to have lost no time in studying my face.” “It is a beautiful and interesting face,” observed the stranger. She swung round sharply on the stool and their eyes met. “You can read faces?” “Yes.” “Tell me, what else do you read in mine?” “Frankness, courage—” “Ah, yes, all the virtues. Perhaps. We will take them for granted.” It was odd how serious the girl had suddenly become. “Tell me the reverse side.” “I see no reverse side,” replied the stranger. “I see but a fair girl, bursting into noble womanhood.” “And nothing else? You read no trace of greed, of vanity, of sordidness, of—” An angry laugh escaped her lips. “And you are a reader of faces!” “A reader of faces.” The stranger smiled. “Do you know what is written upon yours at this very moment? A love of truth that is almost fierce, scorn of lies, scorn of hypocrisy, the desire for all things pure, contempt of all things that are contemptible—especially of such things as are contemptible in woman. Tell me, do I not read aright?”