登陆注册
20037500000002

第2章 I(2)

If they're crazy about clothes, why don't they come to ME for matches?""You are always out at night," I said.

"You know that's not the answer," he protested. "Why do the type-writer girls at the office always go to YOU to sharpen their pencils and tell them how to spell the hard words? Why do the girls in the lunch-rooms serve you first? Because they're hypnotized by your clothes? Is THAT it?""Do they?" I asked; "I hadn't noticed."

Kinney snorted and tossed up his arms. "He hadn't noticed!" he kept repeating. "He hadn't noticed!" For his vacation Kinney bought a second-hand suit-case. It was covered with labels of hotels in France and Switzerland.

"Joe," I said, "if you carry that bag you will be a walking falsehood."Kinney's name is Joseph Forbes Kinney; he dropped the Joseph because he said it did not appear often enough in the Social Register, and could be found only in the Old Testament, and he has asked me to call him Forbes. Having first known him as "Joe," Ioccasionally forget.

"My name is NOT Joe," he said sternly, "and I have as much right to carry a second-hand bag as a new one. The bag says IT has been to Europe. It does not say that I have been there.""But, you probably will," I pointed out, "and then some one who has really visited those places--""Listen!" commanded Kinney. "If you want adventures you must be somebody of importance. No one will go shares in an adventure with Joe Kinney, a twenty-dollar-a-week clerk, the human adding machine, the hall-room boy. But Forbes Kinney, Esq., with a bag from Europe, and a Harvard ribbon round his hat--""Is that a Harvard ribbon round your hat?" I asked.

"It is!" declared Kinney; "and I have a Yale ribbon, and a Turf Club ribbon, too. They come on hooks, and you hook 'em on to match your clothes, or the company you keep. And, what's more," he continued, with some heat, "I've borrowed a tennis racket and a golf bag full of sticks, and you take care you don't give me away.""I see," I returned, "that you are going to get us into a lot of trouble.""I was thinking," said Kinney, looking at me rather doubtfully, "it might help a lot if for the first week you acted as my secretary, and during the second week I was your secretary."Sometimes, when Mr. Joyce goes on a business trip, he takes me with him as his private stenographer, and the change from office work is very pleasant; but I could not see why I should spend one week of my holiday writing letters for Kinney.

"You wouldn't write any letters," he explained. "But if I could tell people you were my private secretary, it would naturally give me a certain importance.""If it will make you any happier," I said, "you can tell people Iam a British peer in disguise."

"There is no use in being nasty about it," protested Kinney. "I am only trying to show you a way that would lead to adventure.""It surely would!" I assented. "It would lead us to jail."The last week in August came, and, as to where we were to go we still were undecided, I suggested we leave it to chance.

"The first thing," I pointed out, "is to get away from this awful city. The second thing is to get away cheaply. Let us write down the names of the summer resorts to which we can travel by rail or by boat for two dollars and put them in a hat. The name of the place we draw will be the one for which we start Saturday afternoon. The idea," I urged, "is in itself full of adventure."Kinney agreed, but reluctantly. What chiefly disturbed him was the thought that the places near New York to which one could travel for so little money were not likely to be fashionable.

"I have a terrible fear," he declared, "that, with this limit of yours, we will wake up in Asbury Park."Friday night came and found us prepared for departure, and at midnight we held our lottery. In a pillow-case we placed twenty slips of paper, on each of which was written the name of a summer resort. Ten of these places were selected by Kinney, and ten by myself. Kinney dramatically rolled up his sleeve, and, plunging his bared arm into our grab-bag, drew out a slip of paper and read aloud: "New Bedford, via New Bedford Steamboat Line." The choice was one of mine.

"New Bedford!" shouted Kinney. His tone expressed the keenest disappointment. "It's a mill town!" he exclaimed. "It's full of cotton mills.""That may be," I protested. "But it's also a most picturesque old seaport, one of the oldest in America. You can see whaling vessels at the wharfs there, and wooden figure-heads, and harpoons--""Is this an expedition to dig up buried cities," interrupted Kinney, "or a pleasure trip? I don't WANT to see harpoons! Iwouldn't know a harpoon if you stuck one into me. I prefer to see hatpins."The Patience did not sail until six o'clock, but we were so anxious to put New York behind us that at five we were on board. Our cabin was an outside one with two berths. After placing our suit-cases in it, we collected camp-chairs and settled ourselves in a cool place on the boat deck. Kinney had bought all the afternoon papers, and, as later I had reason to remember, was greatly interested over the fact that the young Earl of Ivy had at last arrived in this country. For some weeks the papers had been giving more space than seemed necessary to that young Irishman and to the young lady he was coming over to marry. There had been pictures of his different country houses, pictures of himself; in uniform, in the robes he wore at the coronation, on a polo pony, as Master of Fox-hounds. And there had been pictures of Miss Aldrich, and of HER country places at Newport and on the Hudson. From the afternoon papers Kinney learned that, having sailed under his family name of Meehan, the young man and Lady Moya, his sister, had that morning landed in New York, but before the reporters had discovered them, had escaped from the wharf and disappeared.

同类推荐
  • 与周刚清溪玉镜潭宴

    与周刚清溪玉镜潭宴

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Mazelli and Other Poems

    Mazelli and Other Poems

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 衡曲麈谭

    衡曲麈谭

    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。
  • 赏延素心录

    赏延素心录

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 前七国志

    前七国志

    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
  • 求职口才

    求职口才

    求职谈话的四个误区,学会推销自己,巧说应聘动机,自我报价,为自己创造机会,面谈策略。
  • 末世求生之活着

    末世求生之活着

    生存下去,为自己,活着,活着,活着,,,,
  • 宋代晚唐体诗歌研究

    宋代晚唐体诗歌研究

    《宋代晚唐体诗歌研究》共分六章: 第一章重在考证“晚唐”、“晚唐体”两个术语在宋代的出现时间及其文化背景,第二章的研究对象是宋初晚唐体。第三章谈及的是北宋真宗以后至南宋光宗以前的这段时间,第四章是对永嘉四灵的研究。第五章谈的是南宋后期的晚唐体创作及相关问题。第六章是对宋代晚唐体诗歌特色的总结。宋代晚唐体诗人作诗态度近乎狂热,他们重五律、轻古体,偏好于描写秋季暮夜的山水竹石,喜好白描为诗,重中间二联,诗歌呈现出清新平淡的美学特点。
  • 达·芬奇笔记

    达·芬奇笔记

    1651年,一位名叫拉斐尔·杜弗里森的法国出版商根据达·芬奇笔记手稿整理出版了《达·芬奇笔记》。笔记手稿非常随意,稿纸凌乱,没有排序和编码,有的甚至是达·芬奇用左手写成的反书——后人需拿镜子才能破解。手稿无所不谈,但中间不连贯,同一页稿纸上有可能开头说天文,中间谈声音原理,最后说色彩,许多文字写在稿纸边缘。这些即兴的议论,闪耀着真知灼见的光辉,给后人以无穷的智慧的启迪。配上达·芬奇手绘的图片,本书具有极高的欣赏和保存价值。
  • 61个故事学会高效听课

    61个故事学会高效听课

    学生的大部分知识都是通过老师的讲课来获取。听课不仅是学生掌握知识、理解知识、增长知识、接受知识的重要环节,还是发展智力、锻炼观察力、培养思维力、提高记忆力和激发想象力的重要途径。本书围绕四大听课基础环节,为广大中小学生提供了优秀的学习指导,其中包括符号预习法、问题目标预习法、横纵听课法、摘录式笔记法、表格式笔记法等多种适用于中小学生的学习方法,配合61位名人有关学习方法的小故事以及名校师生的经验谈,让中小学生更直观地了解高效听课的方法和途径。
  • 东京喰种之永慕

    东京喰种之永慕

    初见,以命为搏,暗夜厮杀,刀剑声喑哑。【呐,你叫什么名字?这么矫健的身手倒是少见。】明亮的月光之下,她美如罂粟,红唇娇艳欲滴,一笑却是倾尽天下。【不说话?那好,今天,就打到让你开口!】二见,她依旧薄裙黑纱,而他依旧一言不发,眸若晚霞。【啧啧,还是不说话嘛?黑猫先生...】她似月华,亦是镜中月水中花,时而笑靥如花,时而泪如雨下。【我只是还未懂她。】当初一句玩笑话,如今又是几个冬夏?【名为“夏”的季节正在临近,请你细细倾听,黑夜的尽头便是黎明。】朝为红颜,暮成枯骨,不求白首,只求永慕。***【五章定去留√本文除楔子均为第三人称,放心入坑√女主女王√】
  • 娇妻追婚:总裁别再逃

    娇妻追婚:总裁别再逃

    “我华梓豪的女人,谁敢抢?”她的婚礼上,他将她抢走,狂肆宣布,她抵死不认他。“都睡过了,你说熟不熟?”他是商界帝王,一场商业斗争,两人被迫分开,他爱她不能开口,偏偏掐断她的桃花。“华总,你说我是选黑帮老大做我老公,还是选新上任的总裁呢?”“你敢!”某人怒火冲天。“我有什么不敢的,反正……”后面的话没说完,嘴唇被霸道的堵住,某人立刻变身大灰狼……
  • 美男后宫:废材三小姐

    美男后宫:废材三小姐

    这是一个神奇的大陆,她本是将军府的嫡女三小姐却因母亲早逝被庶出的姐姐欺负软弱无能。她是21世纪黑道的统治者上帝的宠儿拥有天使的容貌,魔鬼的身材却因一次刺杀被属下背叛死在了敌人的手下,上帝却给她开了个玩笑让她重生在了懦弱的她身上。当懦弱女睁开眼翻身的时候又会惹来怎样的桃花和危险呢?
  • 红尘脉脉

    红尘脉脉

    欣扬是一个名牌大学的研究生,现攻读计算机专业,在一家著名互联网公司实习,一直青睐于学院另一实验室的女生李依瑾,苦苦追求不得要领,再三思量,决定兵行奇路,棋出险招,这一次出人意料的冒险却换来了令人意想不到的结果,故事也就从此展开。。。
  • 美人计:黑帝有约

    美人计:黑帝有约

    新书推荐《99次说爱:总裁恋爱百分百》他是震撼世界的黑帝,杀伐果断,冷酷无情,不可一世,却偏偏对她,甘愿宠爱无下线。某天晚上:“老公,以后我不吃宵夜了,我今天起开始减肥,如果我瘦回结婚前你可以再追我一次吗?”叶黎刚说完苏爵衍就起床去给她弄吃的。叶黎很是苦闷,这就是结婚和没结婚区别吗?等会儿我是吃还是不吃呢!他这是不想再追我了吧!苏爵衍见娇妻苦闷:“你瘦或你胖,结婚或没结婚,追你千次有何妨。