登陆注册
37808200000002

第2章 CHAPTER I(2)

"Daniel," declared Mrs. Baxter, "it's the queerest thing I ever heard of. You say they don't know--either of them--and the child herself doesn't know, either."

"That's it, Ophelia. No one knows except myself. Captain Hall read the letter to me and put it in my charge a year ago."

"Well, I must say!"

"Yes, I know, I said it at the time, and I've been saying it to myself ever since. It doesn't mean anything; that is, it is not binding legally, of course. It's absolutely unbusinesslike and unpractical. Simply a letter, asking them, as old friends, to do this thing. Whether they will or not the Almighty only knows."

"Well, Daniel, I must say I shouldn't have thought you, as his lawyer, would have let him do such a thing. Of course, I don't know either of them very well, but, from what little I've heard, I should say they know as much about what they would be supposed to do as--as you do about tying a necktie. For mercy sakes let me fix it! The knot is supposed to be under your chin, not under your ear as if you were going to be hung."

The Judge meekly elevated the chin and his wife pulled the tie into place.

"And so," she said, "they can say yes or no just as they like."

"Yes, it rests entirely with them."

"And suppose they say no, what will become of the child then?"

"I can't tell you. Captain Hall seemed pretty certain they wouldn't say no."

"Humph! There! Now you look a little more presentable. Have you got a clean handkerchief? Well, that's an unexpected miracle; I don't know how you happened to think of it. When are you going to speak with them about it?"

"Today, if they come to the funeral, as I suppose they will."

"I shall be in a fidget until I know whether they say yes or no.

And whichever they say I shall keep on fidgeting until I see what happens after that. Poor little Mary-'Gusta! I wonder what WILL become of her."

The Judge shook his head.

Over the road between South Harniss and Ostable a buggy drawn by an aged white horse was moving slowly. On the buggy's seat were two men, Captain Shadrach Gould and Zoeth Hamilton. Captain Gould, big, stout, and bearded, was driving. Mr. Hamilton, small, thin, smooth-faced and white-haired, was beside him. Both were obviously dressed in their Sunday clothes, Captain Shadrach's blue, Mr. Hamilton's black. Each wore an uncomfortably high collar and the shoes of each had been laboriously polished. Their faces, utterly unlike in most respects, were very solemn.

"Ah hum!" sighed Mr. Hamilton.

Captain Shadrach snorted impatiently.

"For the land sakes don't do that again, Zoeth," he protested.

"That's the tenth 'Ah hum' you've cast loose in a mile. I know we're bound to a funeral but there ain't no need of tollin' the bell all the way. I don't like it and I don't think Marcellus would neither, if he could hear you."

"Perhaps he can hear us, Shadrach," suggested his companion, mildly.

"Perhaps he's here with us now; who can tell?"

"Humph! Well, if he is then I KNOW he don't like it. Marcellus never made any fuss whatever happened, and he wouldn't make any at his own funeral no more than at anybody else's. That wasn't his way. Say nothin' and keep her on the course, that was Marcellus. I swan I can hardly make it seem possible that he's gone!"

"Neither can I, Shadrach. And to think that you and me, his old partners and lifelong chums as you might say, hadn't seen nor spoken to him for over two years. It makes me feel bad. Bad and sort of conscience-struck."

"I know; so it does me, in a way. And yet it wasn't our fault, Zoeth. You know as well as I do that Marcellus didn't want to see us. We was over to see him last and he scarcely said a word while we was there. You and me did all the talkin' and he just set and looked at us--when he wasn't lookin' at the floor. I never saw such a change in a man. We asked--yes, by fire, we fairly begged him to come and stay with us for a spell, but he never did. Now it ain't no further from Ostable to South Harniss than it is from South Harniss to Ostable. If he'd wanted to come he could; if he'd wanted to see us he could. We went to see him, didn't we; and WE had a store and a business to leave. He ain't had any business since he give up goin' to sea. He--"

"Sshh! Shh!" interrupted Mr. Hamilton, mildly, "don't talk that way, Shadrach. Don't find fault with the dead."

"Find fault! I ain't findin' fault. I thought as much of Marcellus Hall as any man on earth, and nobody feels worse about his bein' took than I do. But I'm just sayin' what we both know's a fact. He didn't want to see us; he didn't want to see nobody. Since his wife died he lived alone in that house, except for a housekeeper and that stepchild, and never went anywhere or had anybody come to see him if he could help it. A reg'lar hermit--that's what he was, a hermit, like Peleg Myrick down to Setuckit P'int. And when I think what he used to be, smart, lively, able, one of the best skippers and smartest business men afloat or ashore, it don't seem possible a body could change so. 'Twas that woman that done it, that woman that trapped him into gettin' married."

"Sshh! Shh! Shadrach; she's dead, too. And, besides, I guess she was a real good woman; everybody said she was."

"I ain't sayin' she wasn't, am I? What I say is she hadn't no business marryin' a man twenty years older'n she was."

"But," mildly, "you said she trapped him. Now we don't know--"

"Zoeth Hamilton, you know she must have trapped him. You and I agreed that was just what she done. If she hadn't trapped him--set a reg'lar seine for him and hauled him aboard like a school of mackerel--'tain't likely he'd have married her or anybody else, is it? I ain't married nobody, have I? And Marcellus was years older'n I be."

"Well, well, Shadrach!"

"No, 'tain't well; it's bad. He's gone, and--and you and me that was with him for years and years, his very best friends on earth as you might say, wasn't with him when he died. If it hadn't been for her he'd have stayed in South Harniss where he belonged. Consarn women! They're responsible for more cussedness than the smallpox.

'When a man marries his trouble begins'; that's gospel, too."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 豪门宠婚:鲜妻,枕边见!

    豪门宠婚:鲜妻,枕边见!

    先生,大家都是成年人了,昨晚的事情就当……反正吃亏的也不是您。/如果知道自己会一次中奖,尤珍也不会只拿走一件外套蔽体。/再次见到宝贝他爹,宝贝小手一挥,妈咪你爱我是吧,那我要他当我爹地!
  • 遥寒帝月

    遥寒帝月

    昔日神王被封印在断天涯下,一个巧合,一次机缘,万年玄铁链竟被一个孩子误打误撞解开,一枚炎灵戒,一纸血契约,一场乱世传奇就此开始。
  • 深渊生存日记

    深渊生存日记

    深渊,各个位面的邪恶力量交汇之地,是一切邪恶的源头,遍地都是肮脏邪恶的怪物。而我,从床上掉到深渊的人类,该如何生存!
  • 炼丹教父

    炼丹教父

    当李若虚穿越到仙侠世界,发觉自己只能炼丹,却不能修习任何功法后……他意识到,要想一些另外的办法了。
  • 余生一起加油

    余生一起加油

    (本文背景历史架空,考据党慎入)一次穿越让身为孤儿从小生活在农村的沈兮云到了家人万般宠爱的沈家。但是……家里条件不怎么好,一个个脸色也不怎么圆润,虽然可以果腹,但也不是生活的太好。所以穿越了十年的沈兮之决定要带着全家人致富!
  • 鬼刀之乱世神起

    鬼刀之乱世神起

    在一次意外的奇遇当中,他了解到了三界的奥秘、自己的玄妙身份与人界一场不为人知的浩劫。被选为灭世浩劫的应劫者,身在鬼门,肩扛传说中的鬼刀,他没有回头路,唯一能做的就是勇往直前,登上强者颠峰……鬼刀定乾坤,朱砂染红颜!
  • 还好你还在

    还好你还在

    当时光流去当回忆模糊当她有了新的爱人再回首所有的疼痛都已云淡风轻
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 繁华殇逝

    繁华殇逝

    言儿一直都很喜欢八阿哥,但在生死徘徊的边缘,她咬紧牙关,淡淡吐出一句:“世上的事,有谁能真正的明白,凡都逃不过宿命。”繁花飘零,落寞成疾。终抵不过那槐花树下的一声叹息。最终的转身,离开。遗失身后的也不过只是一地花瓣!(本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。)
  • 一场梦的旅程

    一场梦的旅程

    一场虚幻的爱情故事,一场不可思议的梦。我,阿洁,小宇和后来的小螃蟹的结局究竟如何。