登陆注册
37927600000080

第80章 CHAPTER XVI SOME DAYS AT BROOKFIELD FARM(5)

Now he wanted rest and quiet. When Mrs. Grant entered the library and saw the wavy lines of tobacco-smoke that were drifting lazily about the room she stopped, evidently annoyed and uneasy. No such sacrilege of her library had taken place for years; not since her Uncle Reuben had come home from China. The waves of smoke must have caught the expression on her face, for she had hardly reached Oliver's chair before they began stealing along the ceiling in long, slanting lines until they reached the doorway, when with a sudden swoop, as if frightened, and without once looking back, they escaped into the hall.

The dear lady laid her hand on Oliver's shoulder, bent over him in a tender, motherly way, and said:

"Do you think it does you any good?"

"I don't know that it does."

"Why should you do it, then?"

"But I won't if you'd rather I'd not." Oliver sprang to his feet, took his pipe from his mouth, and was about to cross the room to knock the ashes from it into the fireplace when Margaret laid her hand on his arm.

"No, don't stop. Mother is very foolish about some things--smoking is one of them."

"But I can't smoke, darling," he said, in an undertone, "if your mother objects." The mother law was paramount, to say nothing of the courtesy required of him. Then he added, with a meaning look in his eyes--"Can't we get away some place where we can talk?" Deaf mothers are a blessing sometimes.

Margaret pressed his hand--her fingers were still closed over the one holding the pipe.

"In a moment, Ollie," and she rose and went into the adjoining room.

Mrs. Grant went to her husband's side, and in her gentle mission of peace put her arm around his neck, patting his shoulder and talking to him in a low tone, her two yellow-white curls streaming down over the collar of his coat. Silas slipped his hand over his wife's and for an instant caressed it tenderly with his cold, bony fingers. Then seeing Oliver's eyes turning his way he drew in his shoulders with a quick movement and looked askance at his guest. Any public show of affection was against Silas's creed and code. If people wanted to hug each other, better do it upstairs, he would say, not where everybody was looking on, certainly not this young man, who was enough of a mollycoddle already.

John, now that Margaret had gone, moved over from the lounge and took her seat, and the two young men launched out into a discussion of flies and worms and fish-bait, and whether frog's legs were better than minnows in fishing for pickerel, and what was the best-sized shot for woodcock and Jack-snipe.

Oliver told of the ducking-blinds, of the Chesapeake, and of how the men sat in wooden boxes sunk to the water's edge, with the decoy ducks about them, and shot the flocks as they flew over. And John told of a hunting trip he had made with two East Branch guides, and how they went loaded for deer and came back with a bear and two cubs. And so congenial did they find each other's society that before Margaret returned to the room--she had gone into her studio to light the lamp under the tea-kettle--the two young fellows had discovered that they were both very good fellows indeed, especially Oliver and especially John, and Oliver had half promised to come up in the winter and go into camp with John, and John met him more than half-way with a promise to accept Oliver's invitation for a week's visit in Kennedy Square the next time he went home, if that happy event ever took place, when they would both go down to Carroll's Island for a crack at a canvas-back.

This had gone on for ten minutes or more--ten minutes is an absurdly long period of time under certain circumstances--when Margaret's voice was heard in the doorway:

"Come, John, you and Mr. Horn have talked long enough; I want to show him my studio if you'll spare him a moment."

John knew when to spare and when not to--oh, a very intelligent brother was John! He did not follow and talk for another hour of what a good time he would have duck-shooting, and of what togs he ought to carry--spoiling everything; nor did he send his mother in to help Margaret entertain their guest.

None of these stupid things did John do. He said he would go down to the post-office if Oliver didn't mind, and would see him at supper, and Margaret said that that was a very clever idea, as nobody had gone for the mail that day, and there were sure to be letters, and not to forget to ask for hers. Awfully sensible brother was John. Why aren't there more like him?

Entering Margaret's studio was like going back to Moose Hillock. There were sketches of the interior of the school-house, and of the children, and of the teacher who had taught the year before. There was Mrs. Taft sitting on that very porch, peeling potatoes, with a tin pan in her lap--would they ever forget that porch and the moonlight and the song of the tree-toads, and the cry of the loon? There was Hank in corduroys, with an axe over his shoulder; and Hank in a broad straw hat and no shoes, with a fishing-pole in one hand; and Hank chopping wood; the chips littering the ground. There was Ezra Pollard sitting in his buckboard with a buffalo-robe tucked about him, and Samanthy by his side. And best of all, and in the most prominent place, too, there was the original drawing of the Milo--the one she was finishing when Oliver upset Judson, and which, strange to say, was the only Academy drawing which Margaret had framed--besides scores and scores of sketches of people and things and places that she had made in years gone by.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 上苍图录

    上苍图录

    逆斩上苍,执掌劫光。万族争雄,封禅之地。茫茫大世,病秧少年从无尽山脉走出。
  • 蕴仙

    蕴仙

    陈封从仙界堕入凡界,成为宋国文臣之子。无奈家道变故,流落四方。快意恩仇的侠行,让他体会到仙界不曾有的畅意。时光流逝,谁在叹息?他不是霸主,是一方难缠的狠敌!
  • 世末繁星

    世末繁星

    末世降临,世界重组,丧尸涌现,人类成立东西两大联邦,一直与丧尸对抗……在机缘巧合下,她发现一切好像并不是那么简单。
  • 命中权

    命中权

    交通闭塞的“夜郎”一直在等着一场风,让山里的一切都听听山外的声音。有的人死了,死早了;有的人活着却是不如死了,没人能逃过遗忘,但总有故事需要人讲…
  • 帝仙难

    帝仙难

    一念化仙佛,一念渡妖魔。一曲悠扬仙道路,一段红尘情丝愁。一本古朴的书卷,一个心怀仇恨的少年从大漠走出。至此,管你东西南北圣,唯我帝仙证苍穹………
  • 陨界

    陨界

    身怀史上最为神秘而又危险至极的界域,少年将如何脚踏实地步入巅峰!
  • 改变你一生的机会

    改变你一生的机会

    你和我都可能不是什么君王或者伟人,而是一个普通得不能再普通的普通人。但是,我们应该确信,造物主既然创造了我,就一定有我存在的独特价值。你和我,都是世界上独一无二的。只有坚信你的存在及你存在的特殊意义,你才有可能不断升值,最终会成为一个被社会所承认的成功者。如果你以相当的精力长期从事一种职业,但仍旧看不到一点进步、一点成功的希望,那么你就应该反思一下:从自己的兴趣、目标、能力来说,自己究竟是否真诚错了路?如果走错了路,就应该及早掉头,去寻代适合自己的、更有希望的职业。
  • 噩梦前夜

    噩梦前夜

    这个世界崩溃了最开始的迹象只是一些人变得更强了罢了但现在他们准备把获得力量的代价转嫁到所有其他人身上我开始做梦,梦到了我绝对不可能接受的未来我们所做的一切战斗可能没有意义,如同一无所有的我一样但是如果真的有那么一天,他们真的做到了他们的梦将同类相残这四个字用最冠冕堂皇的金碑高高挂在每一个人的心上我终将禁遍天下魔
  • 暮云碧

    暮云碧

    “凡人心险于山川,难于知天。”南宋初年,岁寒山庄少年侠客白衣雪,遵奉师命下山,踏入江湖,自此踏入了一个血雨交织、情爱交错的魔幻世界……女儿痴者,不可不为情困;男儿死耳,不可不为义屈;历经了人性与亲情、爱情的纠葛,白衣雪重又回到了雪山的岁寒山庄,莽莽雪原、绵绵银峰,巍峨的雪山依然肃穆,仿佛什么都没有改变,然而归来的他,还是当年的那个少年吗?
  • 清夜无尘

    清夜无尘

    我和贾海修先生的相识,已有些年头了。每次相见,总会被他那调侃中不失风趣、酸俗中充满雅致、机智中有点使坏、插科打诨中又保有底线的大智慧所折服。在场的人为之捧腹,继而从心底生出一缕缕的敬佩。于是,有人借其名之谐音,调侃贾先生——贾害羞,真性情!真性情,藏在他文章的字里行间……