登陆注册
37343500000021

第21章 THE EPISODE OF THE INDIAN'S AUNT(2)

kittens 'are such a constant source of worry and anxiety!' Auntie Lisbeth sometimes says that about Reginald and me. I wonder what she would say if we were kittens!""Bye the bye, where is your Auntie Lisbeth?" I asked in a strictly conversational tone.

"Well, she's lying in the old boat." "In the old boat!" I repeated.

"Yes," nodded Dorothy; "when it's nice and warm and sleepy, like to- day, she takes a book, and a pillow, and a sunshade, and she goes and lies in the old boat under the Water-stairs. There, just look at this naughty Louise!" she broke off, as the kitten scrambled up to her shoulder and stood there, balancing itself very dextrously with curious angular movements of its tail; "that's because she thinks I've forgotten her milk, you know; she's dreadfully impatient, but I suppose I must humour her this once. Good-afternoon!" And, having given me her hand in her demure, old-fashioned way, Dorothy hurried off, the kitten still perched upon her shoulder, its tail jerking spasmodically with her every step.

In a little while I came in view of the Water~stairs, yet although I paused more than once to look about me, I saw no sign of the Imp. Thinking he was most probably 'in ambush' somewhere, I continued my way, whistling an air out of "The Geisha" to attract his notice. Ten minutes or more elapsed, however, without any sign of him, and I was already close to the stairs, when I stopped whistling all at once, and holding my breath, crept forward on tiptoe.

There before me was the old boat, and in it - her cheek upon a crimsoncushion and the sun ****** a glory of her tumbled hair - was Lisbeth - asleep.

Being come as near as I dared for fear of waking her, I sat down, and lighting my pipe, fell to watching her - the up-curving shadow of her lashes, the gleam of teeth between the scarlet of her parted lips, and the soft undulation of her bosom. And from the heavy braids of her hair my glance wandered down to the little tan shoe peeping at me beneath her skirt, and I called to mind how Goethe has said:

'A pretty foot is not only a continual joy, but it is the one element of beauty that defies the assaults of Time,'

Sometimes a butterfly hovered past, a bee filled the air with his drone, or a bird settled for a moment upon the stairs near-by to preen a ruffled feather, while soft and drowsy with distance came the ceaseless roar of the weir.

I do not know how long I had sat thus, supremely content, when I was suddenly aroused by a rustling close at hand.

"Hist!"

I looked up sharply, and beheld a head, a head adorned with sundry feathers, and a face hideously streaked with red and green paint; but there was no mistaking those golden curls - it was the Imp!

"Hist!" he repeated, bringing out the word with a prolonged hiss, and then - before I could even guess at his intention - there was the swift gleam of a knife, a splash of the severed painter, and caught by the tide the old boat swung out, and was adrift.

The Imp stood gazing on his handiwork with wide eyes, and then as I leaped to my feet something in my look seemed to frighten him, for without a word he turned and fled. But all my attention was centred in the boat, which was drifting slowly into mid-stream with Lisbeth still fast asleep. And as I watched its sluggish progress, with a sudden chill I remembered the weir, which foamed and roared only a short half-mile away. If the boat once got drawn into that - !

Now, I am quite aware that under these circumstances the right and proper thing for me to have done, would have been to throw aside my coat,tear off my boots, etc., and "boldly breast the foamy flood." But I did neither, for the ****** reason that once within the 'foamy flood' aforesaid, there would have been very little chance of my ever getting out again, for - let me confess the fact with the blush of shame - I am no swimmer.

Yet I was not idle, far otherwise. Having judged the distance between the drifting boat and the bank, I began running along, seeking the thing I wanted. And presently, sure enough, I found it - a great pollard oak, growing upon the edge of the water, that identical tree with the 'stickie-out' branches which has already figured in these narratives as the hiding-place of a certain pair of silk stockings.

Hastily swinging myself up, I got astride the lowest branch, which projected out over the water. I had distanced the boat by some hundred yards, and as I sat there I watched its drift, one minute full of hope, and the next as miserably uncertain. My obvious intention was to crawl out upon the branch until it bent with my weight, and so let myself into, or as near the boat as possible. It was close now, so close that I could see the gleam of Lisbeth's hair and the point of the little tan shoe. With my eyes on this, I writhed my way along the bough, which bent more and more as I neared the end. Here I hung, swaying up and down and to and fro in a highly unpleasant manner, while I waited the crucial moment.

Never upon this whole round earth did anything creep as that boat did. There was a majestic deliberation in its progress that positively maddened me. I remember to have once read an articlesomewhere upon the "Sensibility of Material Things," or something of the sort, which I had forgotten long since, but as I hung there suspended between heaven and earth, it came back to me with a rush, and I was perfectly certain that, recognising my precarious position, that time-worn, ancient boat checked its speed out of "pure cussedness."But all things have an end, and so, little by little the blunt bow crept nearer until it was in the very shade of my tree. Grasping the branch, I let myself swing at arm's length; and then I found that I was at least a foot too near the bank. Edging my way, therefore, still further along the branch, I kicked out in a desperate endeavour to reach the boat, and, thebough swaying with me, caught my toe inside the gunwale, drew it under me, and loosing my grasp, was sprawling upon my hands and knees, but safe aboard.

同类推荐
  • 大明正德皇游江南传

    大明正德皇游江南传

    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。
  • 马首农言

    马首农言

    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。
  • 文笔式

    文笔式

    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。
  • 佛说胞胎经

    佛说胞胎经

    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。
  • 家诫要言

    家诫要言

    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
  • 异世界玩家降临

    异世界玩家降临

    罗伊穿越变成异世界落难王子,为了生存,只能开始把异世界伪装成游戏,召唤玩家来给他打工的狗策划之路。-----书友群:731670252,欢迎添加
  • 重生太帅有点烦

    重生太帅有点烦

    这是一个渣男挨雷劈重生新世界的故事;这是一个粉嫩小帅哥在女人当家做主的世界翻身做主人的故事;这是一个因为被颜值遮挡了才华,主角心情苦闷的故事。欢迎书友进QQ群畅所欲言:1022936866
  • 凤临天下之霸王别姬

    凤临天下之霸王别姬

    今生我是你的妻,今生我是你的君,来生我们定不离。若有来生,我定不负君,若有来生,君定不负卿。来生我定与君不离不弃,来生我定予你万千星辉。前世,今生,你是否还是你?而我,是否还是,那个我!
  • 我的命中注定就是她

    我的命中注定就是她

    我有次碰到一个人,她就坐在我旁边,我好像见过她在很长很长时间之前。我悄悄地瞄一眼瞄一眼,一眼一眼的看着我就突然感觉心里难受,眼里发涩,我一抹就有眼泪下来了。她突然看着我用了一种很复杂的眼神,但我看到她眼里和我一样的哀伤。我是不是见过她,可我不记得在哪,在什么时候。
  • 总裁追妻难又难

    总裁追妻难又难

    他是杀伐果断的寒氏总裁,控制A市资金链的流通,黑白两道独断专行;她,殷晶,普通大学生一枚,却在临毕业之际,遇上寒霖这个大尾巴狼,剪不断理还乱的两人拉开了序幕。殷晶看着眼前可爱到萌的包子,笑眯眯的说道:“我要是有这么一个儿子就好了。”低沉黯哑的声音道:“女人,他就是你儿子,你还要抛夫弃子多久?”
  • 唐城一梦

    唐城一梦

    一个大城市,一群不同故事的人,做好人还是坏人,到最后都是别人嘴里的“罪人”
  • 爱情就在不远处

    爱情就在不远处

    你走在前方,不急不慢,洒脱迷人。我跟在后面,从上到下把你看一遍,又一遍。你不会发现,我的眼睛里冒着火;就像火柴头,只要你轻轻一碰,我就完全燃烧。(感谢腾讯文学书评团提供书评支持)
  • 花落惜花开

    花落惜花开

    随风而落何人惜,随风而开何人欢,一朝花开花落,一朝悲欢离合
  • 快穿之我管系统叫爸爸

    快穿之我管系统叫爸爸

    我躺在病床上沉沉睡去,醒来眼前却是一片空白:“任务编号0001,请选择接受或不接受——”这个系统有点坑……
  • 领主和群主成长计划

    领主和群主成长计划

    穿越成士绅之子的温崖,莫名拥有了领主成长系统。刚成为一位微不足道的领主,就成为了各大领主的聊天软件。不仅可以窥屏,还可以收手续费。挂王的日子快乐到飞起~