登陆注册
20030600000034

第34章 CHAPTER XIII(1)

To understand Kitty at this moment one must be able to understand the Irish; and nobody does or can or will. Consider her twenty-four years, her corpuscular inheritance, the love of drama and the love of adventure. Imagine possessing sound ideas of life and the ability to apply them, and spiritually always galloping off on some broad highway - more often than not furnished by some engaging scoundrel of a novelist - and you will be able to construct a half tone of Kitty Conover.

That civilization might be actually on its deathbed, that positively half of the world was starving and dying and going mad through the reaction of the German blight touched her in a detached way. She felt sorry, dreadfully sorry, for the poor things; but as she could not help them she dismissed them from her thoughts every morning after she had read the paper, the way most of us do here in these United States. You cannot grapple with the misery of an unknown person several thousand miles away.

That which had taken place during the past twenty-four hours was to her a lark, a blindman's buff for grown-ups. It was not in her to tremble, to shudder, to hesitate, to weigh this and to balance that. Irish curiosity. Perhaps in the original that immortal line read: "The Irish rush in where angels fear to tread," and some proofreader had a particular grudge against the race.

When the elevator reached the seventeenth floor, the passengers surged forth. All except Kitty, who tarried.

"We don't carry to the eighteenth, miss.

"I am Miss Conover," she replied. "I dared not tell you until we were alone."

"I see." The boy nodded, swept her with an appraising glance, and sent the elevator up to the loft.

"You understand? If any one inquires about me, you don't remember."

"Yes, miss. The boss's orders."

"And if any one does inquire you are to report at once."

"That, too."

The boy rolled back the door and Kitty stepped out upon a Laristan runner of rose hues and cobalt blue. She wondered what it cost Cutty to keep up an establishment like this. There were fourteen rooms, seven facing the north and seven facing the west, with glorious vistas of steam-wreathed roofs and brick Matterhorns and the dim horizon touching the sea. Fine rugs and tapestries and furniture gathered from the four ends of the world; but wholly livable and in no sense atmospheric of the museum. Cutty had excellent taste.

She had visited the apartment but twice before, once in her childhood and again when she was eighteen. Cutty had given a dinner in honour of her mother's birthday. She smiled as she recalled the incident.

Cutty had placed a box of candles at the side of her mother's plate and told her to stick as many into the cake as she thought best.

"Hello!" said Cutty, emerging from one of the doors. "What the dickens have you been up to? My man has just telephoned me that he lost track of you in Wanamaker's."

Kitty explained, delighted.

"Well, well! If you can lose a man such as I set to watch you, you'll have no trouble shaking the others."

"It was Karlov, Cutty."

"How did you learn?"

"Searched the morgue and found a half tone of him. Positively Karlov. How is the patient?"

"Harrison says he's pulling round amazingly. A tough skull. He'll be up for his meals in no time."

"How do you do it?" she asked with a gesture.

"Do what?"

"Manage a place like this? In a busy office district. It's the most wonderful apartment in New York. Riverside has nothing like it. It must cost. like sixty."

"The building is mine, Kitty. That makes it possible. An uncle who knew I hated money and the responsibilities that go with it, died and left it to me."

"Why, Cutty, you must be rich!"

"I'm sorry. What can I do? I can't give it away."

"But you don't have to work!"

"Oh, yes, I do. I'm that kind. I'd die of a broken heart if I had to sit still. It's the game."

"Did mother know?"

"Yes."

With the toe of a snug little bronze boot Kitty drew an outline round a pattern in the rug.

"Love is a funny thing," was her comment.

"It sure is, old-timer. But what put the thought into your head?"

"I was thinking how very much mumsy must have been in love with father."

"But she never knew that I loved her, Kitty."

"What's that got to do with it? If she had wanted money you wouldn't have had the least chance in the world."

"Probably not! But what would you have done in your mother's place?"

"Snapped you up like that!" Kitty flashed back.

"You cheerful little - little - "

"Liar. Say it!" Kitty laughed. "But am I a cheerful little liar?

I don't know. It would be an awful temptation. Somebody to wait on you; heaps of flowers when you wanted them; beautiful gowns and thingummies and furs and limousines. I've often wondered what I should do if I found myself with love and youth on one side and money and attraction on the other. I've always been in straitened circumstances. I never spent a dollar in all my days when I didn't think I ought to have held back three or four cents of it. You can't know, Cutty, what it is to be poor and want beautiful things and good times. Of course. I couldn't marry just money. There would have to be some kind of a man to go with it. Someone interesting enough to make me forget sometimes that I'd thrown away a lover for a pocket-book."

"Would you marry me, Kitty?"

"Are you serious?"

"Let's suppose I am"

"No. I couldn't marry you, Cutty I should always be having my mother's ghost as a rival."

"But supposing I fell in love with you?"

"Then I'd always be doubting your constancy. But what queer talk!"'

"Kitty, you're a joy,! Lordy, my luck in dropping in to see you yesterday!"

"And a little whippersnapper like me calling a great man like you Cutty!"

"Well, if it embarrasses you, you might switch to papa once in a while."

Kitty's laughter rang down the corridor. "I'll remember that whenever I want to make you mad. Who's here?"

"Nobody but Harrison and the nurse. Both good citizens, and I've taken them into my confidence to a certain extent. You can talk freely before them."

"Am I to see the patient?"

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 难得糊涂:由聪明变糊涂的人生大智慧

    难得糊涂:由聪明变糊涂的人生大智慧

    本书包括:唯有大智慧 才能真糊涂、不拘一格 彰显糊涂智慧、扬长避短 巧打糊涂算盘、适可而止 糊涂与精明并用等内容。
  • 旭日苍穹

    旭日苍穹

    这是一群热血青年,这是一个段艰难的路程,他不想屈服于命运,不想让亲人朋友受到伤害,他只想快快乐乐的生活,他只想有一个完整的家,和一些真心的朋友,兄弟,他要努力,保护身边的人,告诉敌人……不要靠近他们……
  • 夜冥鬼曲

    夜冥鬼曲

    繁花似锦的都市,总有说不尽的爱恨情仇,道不尽的是非恩怨;人心、人性,善恶似乎总在一念之间;夜幕之下,暗流汹涌,人有时不是人,鬼有时不是鬼;喧嚣的都市,妖魔鬼怪横行无忌;繁华的街市,魑魅魍魉全巢出动!鬼节祭祀,一场大战,学霸开启了非凡之路!血族、狼人、僵尸、妖怪以及那些散落人间的孤魂野鬼!一场惊天阴谋,一个持续几千年的布局……
  • 银萧

    银萧

    那场意外,是她心上无法抹去的伤痕:直到那个午后,那个人再次出现在她的世界里,只不过,他身边已经有了另外一个她。他不记得她了?还是说不愿提起她?她不知道。在她黯然神伤时,那个人又来安慰她?既然你已经不爱我,为何又要给我希望……
  • 无限空间之情谊无限

    无限空间之情谊无限

    异形、咒怨、恶灵古堡、猛鬼、死神来了……我们在这一部部犹如地狱的恐怖电影中挣扎、奋战和强大中。讲述七个朋友因为死亡而进入一部部恐怖片轮迴中,友情.愛情与羁绊,生死輪迴中的情义。
  • 苍老的少年之迷惘的依维斯(下)

    苍老的少年之迷惘的依维斯(下)

    他,拥有这个世界无数人所渴盼的天赋;拥有这个世界无数人所梦想的实力;也曾拥有这个世界无数人所梦寐以求的权力。但是他并不快乐,天赋、实力、权力都是他的累赘。他所做的都是被无数人艳羡的事,但并不是他所想做的。可为了这个世界所有被欺压被奴役的种族,他除了挥舞手中的剑,还能做些什么?
  • 疯子大帝

    疯子大帝

    这就是个该下九幽地狱的疯子的故事,没有感人、没有热血、没有小聪明,有的,只是一个谁也走不进他内心的,孤独的疯子。疯子么,算是吧。这个就应该下到九幽地狱去的疯子。我有三个爱好,第一是吃、第二是喜欢新鲜事物、第三便是探索研究。来,来,来,小妹妹,叔叔带你去看大怪兽,嘿嘿嘿。
  • 倾城妖魅:腹黑女王大人

    倾城妖魅:腹黑女王大人

    南宫璇作为赏金杀手,在最后一个任务中穿越到了一个玄妙的空间。在这里,她是至高无上的女王,面对内忧外患,她从容不迫一一破解,却解不开自身的情毒。她爱上那个为她解毒,助她报仇的男人。她周旋在阴谋和暗算中,只把后背留给他,却不想,最后遭到的是最爱人的最深伤害……“如果可能,我会选择,这辈子不爱你……
  • 傲世枫剑

    傲世枫剑

    何为江湖?一斛酒,一把剑,一段恩仇。何为山河?一掊土,一滴泪,一群英豪。艰难复仇之路上,他步步为营,却不知一切的背后,隐藏着令人震惊的真相。阴谋,诡计,谁在背后算计谁?而谁才是真正的赢家?本应快意恩仇的江湖失去了本来面目,本来如织似锦的山河渐渐变得陌生。
  • 中华传统语典

    中华传统语典

    本书精选了歇后语、俗语、谚语、绕口令、对联、劝世贤言、诗赋、语典故事等内容,并根据实际需要,将每个条目按主题分成简明而系统的体例,实为妙趣横生的语言储备库。