登陆注册
5457700000027

第27章 IX(3)

"Do you mean, when I fall in love? But I am in love--Oh, there's Eldorada and Mr. Beck!" She broke off with a jerk, signalling with her field-glass to the pair who had just appeared at the farther end of the nave. "I told them that if they'd meet me here to-day I'd try to make them understand Tiepolo. Because, you see, at home we never really have understood Tiepolo; and Mr. Beck and Eldorada are the only ones to realize it. Mr. Buttles simply won't." She turned to Lansing and held out her hand. "I am in love," she repeated earnestly, "and that's the reason why I find art such a RE source."

She restored her eye-glasses, opened her manual, and strode across the church to the expectant neophytes.

Lansing, looking after her, wondered for half a moment whether Mr. Beck were the object of this apparently unrequited sentiment; then, with a queer start of introspection, abruptly decided that, no, he certainly was not. But then--but then--.

Well, there was no use in following up such conjectures .... He turned home-ward, wondering if the picnickers had already reached Palazzo Vanderlyn.

They got back only in time for a late dinner, full of chaff and laughter, and apparently still enchanted with each other's society. Nelson Vanderlyn beamed on his wife, sent his daughter off to bed with a kiss, and leaning back in his armchair before the fruit-and-flower-laden table, declared that he'd never spent a jollier day in his life. Susy seemed to come in for a full share of his approbation, and Lansing thought that Ellie was unusually demonstrative to her friend. Strefford, from his hostess's side, glanced across now and then at young Mrs.

Lansing, and his glance seemed to Lansing a confidential comment on the Vanderlyn raptures. But then Strefford was always having private jokes with people or about them; and Lansing was irritated with himself for perpetually suspecting his best friends of vague complicities at his expense. "If I'm going to be jealous of Streffy now--!" he concluded with a grimace of self-derision.

Certainly Susy looked lovely enough to justify the most irrational pangs. As a girl she had been, for some people's taste, a trifle fine-drawn and sharp-edged; now, to her old lightness of line was added a shadowy bloom, a sort of star- reflecting depth. Her movements were slower, less angular; her mouth had a needing droop, her lids seemed weighed down by their lashes; and then suddenly the old spirit would reveal itself through the new languor, like the tartness at the core of a sweet fruit. As her husband looked at her across the flowers and lights he laughed inwardly at the nothingness of all things else.

Vanderlyn and Clarissa left betimes the next morning; and Mrs.

Vanderlyn, who was to start for St. Moritz in the afternoon, devoted her last hours to anxious conferences with her maid and Susy. Strefford, with Fred Gillow and the others, had gone for a swim at the Lido, and Lansing seized the opportunity to get back to his book.

The quietness of the great echoing place gave him a foretaste of the solitude to come. By mid-August all their party would be scattered: the Hickses off on a cruise to Crete and the AEgean, Fred Gillow on the way to his moor, Strefford to stay with friends in Capri till his annual visit to Northumberland in September. One by one the others would follow, and Lansing and Susy be left alone in the great sun-proof palace, alone under the star-laden skies, alone with the great orange moons-still theirs!--above the bell-tower of San Giorgio. The novel, in that blessed quiet, would unfold itself as harmoniously as his dreams.

He wrote on, forgetful of the passing hours, till the door opened and he heard a step behind him. The next moment two hands were clasped over his eyes, and the air was full of Mrs.

Vanderlyn's last new scent.

"You dear thing--I'm just off, you know," she said. "Susy told me you were working, and I forbade her to call you down. She and Streffy are waiting to take me to the station, and I've run up to say good-bye."

"Ellie, dear!" Full of compunction, Lansing pushed aside his writing and started up; but she pressed him back into his seat.

"No, no! I should never forgive myself if I'd interrupted you.

I oughtn't to have come up; Susy didn't want me to. But I had to tell you, you dear .... I had to thank you..."

In her dark travelling dress and hat, so discreetly conspicuous, so negligent and so studied, with a veil masking her paint, and gloves hiding her rings, she looked younger, simpler, more natural than he had ever seen her. Poor Ellie such a good fellow, after all!

"To thank me? For what? For being so happy here?" he laughed, taking her hands.

She looked at him, laughed back, and flung her arms about his neck.

"For helping me to be so happy elsewhere--you and Susy, you two blessed darlings!" she cried, with a kiss on his cheek.

Their eyes met for a second; then her arms slipped slowly downward, dropping to her sides. Lansing sat before her like a stone.

"Oh," she gasped, "why do you stare so? Didn't you know ...?"

They heard Strefford's shrill voice on the stairs. "Ellie, where the deuce are you? Susy's in the gondola. You'll miss the train!"

Lansing stood up and caught Mrs. Vanderlyn by the wrist. "What do you mean? What are you talking about?"

"Oh, nothing ... But you were both such bricks about the letters .... And when Nelson was here, too .... Nick, don't hurt my wrist so! I must run!"

He dropped her hand and stood motionless, staring after her and listening to the click of her high heels as she fled across the room and along the echoing corridor.

When he turned back to the table he noticed that a small morocco case had fallen among his papers. In falling it had opened, and before him, on the pale velvet lining, lay a scarf-pin set with a perfect pearl. He picked the box up, and was about to hasten after Mrs. Vanderlyn--it was so like her to shed jewels on her path!--when he noticed his own initials on the cover.

He dropped the box as if it had been a hot coal, and sat for a long while gazing at the gold N. L., which seemed to have burnt itself into his flesh.

At last he roused himself and stood up.

同类推荐
  • 皆大欢喜

    皆大欢喜

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 师子素驮娑王断肉经

    师子素驮娑王断肉经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 客窗闲话续集

    客窗闲话续集

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛祖正传古今捷录并拈颂

    佛祖正传古今捷录并拈颂

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 浴像功德经

    浴像功德经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 阴霾之血

    阴霾之血

    看似稳定的王国暗流涌动,各方势力借此机会兴风作浪。身份不明的剑客,离家求学的少爷还有受人歧视的猫耳女孩,三位旅行者被卷入到这股暗流中。一只无形的大手慢慢揭开他们守护的秘密。那肮脏的血统,传承的责任以及坚定的承诺是否会让三人的友情依旧深厚......在这复杂的世道下,没人知道答案。
  • 国学养生密码:国学精粹与百姓养生

    国学养生密码:国学精粹与百姓养生

    《国学养生密码:国学精粹与百姓养生》取国学中养生文化的精髓,编录成一套可运用于实际的养生方案,使之成为您身边的保健医生和养生导师,使您真正做到内修外炼,在压力和忙碌中运用国学并学会养生。“养生”一词,始见于道家的《庄子·内篇》。我国是一个非常注重养生的国度,儒、释、道等国学在形成过程中,养生文化都是其中最为重要的内容之一。
  • 维迅之战

    维迅之战

    一本古风韵味的小说,请大家笑纳,不喜勿喷谢谢。
  • 重生时空,将门女

    重生时空,将门女

    百世轮回,数万年苦苦追寻不得,擦肩回眸却终不得见;数十万年孤单,只换得一日相伴,终了却以神魂俱灭为代价。
  • 佛说观无量寿佛经疏

    佛说观无量寿佛经疏

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 求缨

    求缨

    红衣国士,初出茅庐,狐性难驯!夜晚凉亭,老神仙敬酒,谁能坐上之宾?老夫子怒目,恶和尚念经。书生腕袖折笔,山河铁卷,压得仙人跪地。多年以后,少年骑牛,危楼东望,拔剑扬眉,惊天动地!
  • 再一次2010

    再一次2010

    承平六十载,盛世文娱兴。文化产业年值万亿,成为国民支柱产业之一;电影票房产值百亿,成为世界第二大市场;网剧、网综彗星般崛起,互联网成为全新娱乐平台。这是娱乐的盛世,这是文化的狂欢,这是……好吧,我实在是编不下去了,这其实就是一个年轻人,重生少年的故事,很简单的。 ****** 群号:755453903,欢迎来玩。
  • 从拯救咖啡店开始

    从拯救咖啡店开始

    穿越到疑似二次元的世界,随身携带拯救系统做福利。能够通过增加熟练度的方式提升等级?完成任务后的抽奖能够获得各种物品以及能力?还需要前往更多二次元世界完成拯救任务?好吧,在此之前李亚林最需要考虑的,还是如何赚够一个亿的债款,守住那承载着少女梦想的咖啡店。一切都要从这里开始……
  • 次皇临

    次皇临

    玉皇大帝,在地仙界和灵山大战,战死,而如来同样战死,天庭易主,佛教易主重生在末法时代,玉皇发现自己被黑成{不可描述}为了重振玉皇大帝之名,为了再次夺得天庭玉皇在末法时代修仙修心,只待再次称帝
  • 昨夜星辰

    昨夜星辰

    为守护恋人的秘密,安星甘愿被千万人误解,负罪前行,但来自封度辰的报复,让她一次次跌入尘埃,匍匐难行……她清楚地看清他眼中的恨意,心中像是千万只蚂蚁啃噬着,当他厌恶地起身后,她方才低低地开口道:“封度辰,我从不曾背叛你……”玻璃乍碎,安星红着眼坐上三年前的那辆车,一路逛飙!“封度辰,你口口声声念着我欠你封家一条命!今天!我还给你!”轰鸣声断,封度辰只觉自己的心弦也跟着断了……