登陆注册
6260300000035

第35章

It was a warm afternoon in May, and the crooked ailanthus-tree rooted in a fissure of the opposite pavement was a fountain of tender green. Women in light dresses passed with the languid step of spring; and presently there came a man with a hand-cart full of pansy and geranium plants who stopped outside the window, signalling to Ann Eliza to buy.

An hour went by before the door of the back room opened and the priest reappeared with that mysterious covered something in his hands. Ann Eliza had risen, drawing back as he passed. He had doubtless divined her antipathy, for he had hitherto only bowed in going in and out; but to day he paused and looked at her compassionately.

"I have left your sister in a very beautiful state of mind,"he said in a low voice like a woman's. "She is full of spiritual consolation."Ann Eliza was silent, and he bowed and went out. She hastened back to Evelina's bed, and knelt down beside it. Evelina's eyes were very large and bright; she turned them on Ann Eliza with a look of inner illumination.

"I shall see the baby," she said; then her eyelids fell and she dozed.

The doctor came again at nightfall, administering some last palliatives; and after he had gone Ann Eliza, refusing to have her vigil shared by Miss Mellins or Mrs. Hawkins, sat down to keep watch alone.

It was a very quiet night. Evelina never spoke or opened her eyes, but in the still hour before dawn Ann Eliza saw that the restless hand outside the bed-clothes had stopped its twitching.

She stooped over and felt no breath on her sister's lips.

The funeral took place three days later. Evelina was buried in Calvary Cemetery, the priest assuming the whole care of the necessary arrangements, while Ann Eliza, a passive spectator, beheld with stony indifference this last negation of her past.

A week afterward she stood in her bonnet and mantle in the doorway of the little shop. Its whole aspect had changed. Counter and shelves were bare, the window was stripped of its familiar miscellany of artificial flowers, note-paper, wire hat-frames, and limp garments from the dyer's; and against the glass pane of the doorway hung a sign: "This store to let."Ann Eliza turned her eyes from the sign as she went out and locked the door behind her. Evelina's funeral had been very expensive, and Ann Eliza, having sold her stock-in-trade and the few articles of furniture that remained to her, was leaving the shop for the last time. She had not been able to buy any mourning, but Miss Mellins had sewed some crape on her old black mantle and bonnet, and having no gloves she slipped her bare hands under the folds of the mantle.

It was a beautiful morning, and the air was full of a warm sunshine that had coaxed open nearly every window in the street, and summoned to the window-sills the sickly plants nurtured indoors in winter. Ann Eliza's way lay westward, toward Broadway; but at the corner she paused and looked back down the familiar length of the street. Her eyes rested a moment on the blotched "Bunner Sisters" above the empty window of the shop; then they travelled on to the overflowing foliage of the Square, above which was the church tower with the dial that had marked the hours for the sisters before Ann Eliza had bought the nickel clock. She looked at it all as though it had been the scene of some unknown life, of which the vague report had reached her: she felt for herself the only remote pity that busy people accord to the misfortunes which come to them by hearsay.

She walked to Broadway and down to the office of the house-agent to whom she had entrusted the sub-letting of the shop. She left the key with one of his clerks, who took it from her as if it had been any one of a thousand others, and remarked that the weather looked as if spring was really coming; then she turned and began to move up the great thoroughfare, which was just beginning to wake to its multitudinous activities.

She walked less rapidly now, studying each shop window as she passed, but not with the desultory eye of enjoyment: the watchful fixity of her gaze overlooked everything but the object of its quest. At length she stopped before a small window wedged between two mammoth buildings, and displaying, behind its shining plate-glass festooned with muslin, a varied assortment of sofa-cushions, tea-cloths, pen-wipers, painted calendars and other specimens of feminine industry. In a corner of the window she had read, on a slip of paper pasted against the pane: "Wanted, a Saleslady," and after studying the display of fancy articles beneath it, she gave her mantle a twitch, straightened her shoulders and went in.

Behind a counter crowded with pin-cushions, watch-holders and other needlework trifles, a plump young woman with smooth hair sat sewing bows of ribbon on a scrap basket. The little shop was about the size of the one on which Ann Eliza had just closed the door;and it looked as fresh and gay and thriving as she and Evelina had once dreamed of ****** Bunner Sisters. The friendly air of the place made her pluck up courage to speak.

"Saleslady? Yes, we do want one. Have you any one to recommend?" the young woman asked, not unkindly.

Ann Eliza hesitated, disconcerted by the unexpected question;and the other, cocking her head on one side to study the effect of the bow she had just sewed on the basket, continued: "We can't afford more than thirty dollars a month, but the work is light.

She would be expected to do a little fancy sewing between times.

We want a bright girl: stylish, and pleasant manners. You know what I mean. Not over thirty, anyhow; and nice-looking. Will you write down the name?"Ann Eliza looked at her confusedly. She opened her lips to explain, and then, without speaking, turned toward the crisply-curtained door.

"Ain't you going to leave the AD-dress?" the young woman called out after her. Ann Eliza went out into the thronged street. The great city, under the fair spring sky, seemed to throb with the stir of innumerable beginnings. She walked on, looking for another shop window with a sign in it.

THE END.

同类推荐
  • Roundabout Papers

    Roundabout Papers

    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。
  • 词品-郭麟

    词品-郭麟

    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。
  • 因明入正理论义纂要

    因明入正理论义纂要

    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。
  • 下第述怀

    下第述怀

    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。
  • 五言排律

    五言排律

    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
  • 只愿时光唯有你

    只愿时光唯有你

    “我要离家出走。”淡定的安远看着炸毛的颜如玉,沉默良久。“请把我打包带走。”石化的颜如玉顿时僵立在原地“下一次,我要先爱上你!""红着脸的安远,霸气表白的某玉,李城南哀伤的说“安离,再也不要离开我,好吗?”早已经哭成泪人的安离说“下一次,我绝对不会先放手。”多年后再次相见的安远说“初进黑道是无奈,可是后来却是为了护你周全。”颜如玉看着多年不见的清俊容颜,说出这辈子最难说的话“初次见你时倾心,现在见到发现那是爱。”
  • 韵水华

    韵水华

    水华部族,只不过一潭清泉,一面之缘,素衣红绸,青衣玉冠,一世相守本文虚构,切勿抄袭。
  • 魔神仙王

    魔神仙王

    叶昊天本是叶氏家族族长的二公子,从小聪明伶俐,修炼天赋更是惊人。在一次游玩时被魔人抓走,魔人将死希望能够将他吞噬而得到重生,但天不灭他,不仅未死,还习得至上魔功。本应成魔的他,在一处山洞中获得一本仙法,从此魔仙共存,时魔时仙.......自此他踏上了一条充满奇遇、坎坷的道路,他立志要做一个强者,人挡杀人魔挡灭魔
  • 修仙残梦

    修仙残梦

    断剑斩尘世,末灭世间,天若不顾,毕以我之力开辟这永恒罪恶,凡界华夏由我镇守!
  • 乳此美丽

    乳此美丽

    一个像面条的包子大人要搞点事情所以这个构思了好久下笔好难的结局难预测的文文
  • 一直不说永远

    一直不说永远

    [花雨授权]16岁那年,情窦初开,\r周月年的世界里只有张天叙。\r青春与爱的困惑,\r暗恋与错失的苦恼,\r都比不上那一句无法说出口的“永远”,\r让人抱憾神伤。\r
  • 总裁的小可爱萌妻

    总裁的小可爱萌妻

    宁小琳从小到大就没什么怕的,混世魔王见了她都怕,为什么?因为她比混世魔王更混。她有一个宠女狂魔的爹地,还有一个宠妹狂魔的哥哥。家庭美满幸福,从小就没什么怕的。却唯独见了一个人就栽在了他的手上——欧华辕。三大家族之首欧家家主,欧氏集团总裁。宁小琳见欧华辕第一眼就心动,欧华辕见宁小琳第一眼就觉得这个女人很奇怪。“说,你是什么时候爱上我的?”“我对你一见钟情。”宁小琳托着下巴,眼睛直视着欧华辕,从薄唇中吐出这几个字。欧华辕俯身,吻住了宁小琳的嘴。
  • 系统之人生须尽欢

    系统之人生须尽欢

    简介:十年生死两茫茫,不思量自难忘。意外重生,是宿命还是轮回?林源回到十年前,又会掀起怎样的波澜呢?秉持本心,畅游世间。
  • 刚好遇见你的时光

    刚好遇见你的时光

    他说:“我过得一点都不好”我不得不狠一狠心说:“那和我有什么关系。”
  • 我的dnf系统有问题

    我的dnf系统有问题

    玩家陈凡意外获得dnf系统从此走上一天不归路。在漫威反派的压力下坚挺成长,其实是拿反派当经验刷;调皮的助手,天天被助手吐槽。