登陆注册
20266000000021

第21章

The words were hardly out of my mouth before I repented that my anxiety to get rid of my unwelcome visitors had made me incautious enough to acknowledge that my father would be away from home for the whole night.

Shifty Dick and his companion looked at each other when Iunwisely let out the truth, but made no remark except to ask me if I would give them a drop of cider.I answered sharply that Ihad no cider in the house, having no fear of the consequences of refusing them drink, because I knew that plenty of men were at work within hail, in a neighboring quarry.The two looked at each other again when I denied having any cider to give them; and Jerry (as I am obliged to call him, knowing no other name by which to distinguish the fellow) took off his cap to me once more, and, with a kind of blackguard gentility upon him, said they would have the pleasure of calling the next day, when my father was at home.I said good-afternoon as ungraciously as possible, and, to my great relief, they both left the cottage immediately afterward.

As soon as they were well away, I watched them from the door.

They trudged off in the direction of Moor Farm; and, as it was beginning to get dusk, I soon lost sight of them.

Half an hour afterward I looked out again.

The wind had lulled with the sunset, but the mist was rising, and a heavy rain was beginning to fall.Never did the lonely prospect of the moor look so dreary as it looked to my eyes that evening.

Never did I regret any slight thing more sincerely than I then regretted the leaving of Mr.Knifton's pocketbook in my charge.Icannot say that I suffered under any actual alarm, for I felt next to certain that neither Shifty Dick nor Jerry had got a chance of setting eyes on so small a thing as the pocketbook while they were in the kitchen; but there was a kind of vague distrust troubling me--a suspicion of the night--a dislike of being left by myself, which I never remember having experienced before.This feeling so increased after I had closed the door and gone back to the kitchen, that, when I heard the voices of the quarrymen as they passed our cottage on their way home to the village in the valley below Moor Farm, I stepped out into the passage with a momentary notion of telling them how I was situated, and asking them for advice and protection.

I had hardly formed this idea, however, before I dismissed it.

None of the quarrymen were intimate friends of mine.I had a nodding acquaintance with them, and believed them to be honest men, as times went.But my own common sense told me that what little knowledge of their characters I had was by no means sufficient to warrant me in admitting them into my confidence in the matter of the pocketbook.I had seen enough of poverty and poor men to know what a terrible temptation a large sum of money is to those whose whole lives are passed in scraping up sixpences by weary hard work.It is one thing to write fine sentiments in books about incorruptible honesty, and another thing to put those sentiments in practice when one day's work is all that a man has to set up in the way of an obstacle between starvation and his own fireside.

The only resource that remained was to carry the pocketbook with me to Moor Farm, and ask permission to pass the night there.But I could not persuade myself that there was any real necessity for taking such a course as this; and, if the truth must be told, my pride revolted at the idea of presenting myself in the character of a coward before the people at the farm.Timidity is thought rather a graceful attraction among ladies, but among poor women it is something to be laughed at.A woman with less spirit of her own than I had, and always shall have, would have considered twice in my situation before she made up her mind to encounter the jokes of plowmen and the jeers of milkmaids.As for me, I had hardly considered about going to the farm before I despised myself for entertaining any such notion."No, no," thought I, "Iam not the woman to walk a mile and a half through rain, and mist, and darkness to tell a whole kitchenful of people that I am afraid.Come what may, here I stop till father gets back."Having arrived at that valiant resolution, the first thing I did was to lock and bolt the back and front doors, and see to the security of every shutter in the house.

That duty performed, I made a blazing fire, lighted my candle, and sat down to tea, as snug and comfortable as possible.I could hardly believe now, with the light in the room, and the sense of security inspired by the closed doors and shutters, that I had ever felt even the slightest apprehension earlier in the day.Isang as I washed up the tea-things; and even the cat seemed to catch the infection of my good spirits.I never knew the pretty creature so playful as she was that evening.

The tea-things put by, I took up my knitting, and worked away at it so long that I began at last to get drowsy.The fire was so bright and comforting that I could not muster resolution enough to leave it and go to bed.I sat staring lazily into the blaze, with my knitting on my lap--sat till the splashing of the rain outside and the fitful, sullen sobbing of the wind grew fainter and fainter on my ear.The last sounds I heard before I fairly dozed off to sleep were the cheerful crackling of the fire and the steady purring of the cat, as she basked luxuriously in the warm light on the hearth.Those were the last sounds before Ifell asleep.The sound that woke me was one loud bang at the front door.

I started up, with my heart (as the saying is) in my mouth, with a frightful momentary shuddering at the roots of my hair--Istarted up breathless, cold and motionless, waiting in the silence I hardly knew for what, doubtful at first whether I had dreamed about the bang at the door, or whether the blow had really been struck on it.

In a minute or less there came a second bang, louder than the first.I ran out into the passage.

"Who's there?"

"Let us in," answered a voice, which I recognised immediately as the voice of Shifty Dick.

同类推荐
  • 广志绎

    广志绎

    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。
  • 圣佛母般若波罗蜜多九颂精义论

    圣佛母般若波罗蜜多九颂精义论

    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。
  • 牟梨曼陀罗咒经

    牟梨曼陀罗咒经

    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。
  • 龙王兄弟经

    龙王兄弟经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说菩萨本行经

    佛说菩萨本行经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 无限末世

    无限末世

    猛鬼街,异形,生化危机。等等等等,恐怖片世界又回来了,一样的无限,不一样的未来,看洅渡轮迴带领你体验不一样的恐怖,新的未来,一切尽在无限末世!喜欢的赶紧收藏加推荐吧,有人欣赏才会是我写下去的动力!
  • 海贼王之无敌副船长

    海贼王之无敌副船长

    重生到海贼王的林天,机缘巧合下拜卡普为师,被誉为海军有史以来最具潜力的海军士兵,从小与路飞、艾斯结交深厚的友情。但林天引发了震惊世界的天龙人事件,最后叛出海军,重伤逃遁到风车村。在路飞的邀请下,成为了草帽海贼船的副船长,跟随着未来的海贼王。当习惯了根据计划行事副船长,碰到了喜欢单独行动、粗神经的船长,会发生什么有趣的事…当索隆知道了剑意、人剑合一时,索隆的剑术会变成怎样……当乌索普后面除了一把强力弹弓外,还背拥有着超强杀伤力的镭射狙击枪,会发生什么………………一切尽在《重生海贼王之副船长》
  • 瞒天决

    瞒天决

    天地不仁,视苍生为草芥;众生劫降,命运谁主沉浮?书友交流群:95117748(进群密码:9511)
  • 余生,囚你无期

    余生,囚你无期

    民国军阀混战时期,一场家族纷争,让年幼的富豪之女陈若兰(柳菲菲)沦落街头,幸福的生活在一夕之间倾落。陈若兰(艾草)被班主收养,华丽蜕变,成为一代名旦,邂逅军阀少帅江少华,奈何青梅竹马却不相识,利用,阴谋,危机,伤害,在这风雨飘摇的大上海,化成一柄柄利剑,相爱却不能相守,陪伴却不能长久,一段善与恶,爱与恨的情感交错就此拉开帷幕……
  • 人间训

    人间训

    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。
  • 等君来之白芍已开

    等君来之白芍已开

    她是将军府三小姐,因为母亲遗愿男扮女装进入学堂念书,于是她又多了一重身份----将军府三少爷。他是将军遗失在外的儿子,而他的身份一直由被错抱的丞相府少爷代替,而他则成了丞相府少爷。他是皇帝从小遗失的五皇子。当他遇见她,一场大的斗争刚刚开始......
  • 空中奇景(走进科学)

    空中奇景(走进科学)

    本套书全面而系统地介绍了当今世界各种各样的难解之谜和科学技术,集知识性、趣味性、新奇性、疑问性与科普性于一体,深入浅出,生动可读,通俗易懂,目的是使广大读者在兴味盎然地领略世界难解之谜和科学技术的同时,能够加深思考,启迪智慧,开阔视野,增加知识,能够正确了解和认识这个世界,激发求知的欲望和探索的精神,激起热爱科学和追求科学的热情,不断掌握开启人类世界的金钥匙,不断推动人类社会向前发展,使我们真正成为人类社会的主人。
  • 超能提取系统

    超能提取系统

    这是个什么鬼系统?装逼竟然可以产生能量?不喜装逼的主角为了验证窝囊父亲的身份,踏上了装逼之路。“喂,那什么系统,这能量可以干嘛?””换取异能、修炼古法……而且还有几率让你装的逼成为现实!“
  • 墨痕琳轩

    墨痕琳轩

    经过一段时间思考,我还是想把“墨琳”的爱情写完,我喜欢悲伤的爱情,只有悲伤才能最打动人心,或许这和我自身有关。当现实的势力与残酷降临在我们身上,你是否还能记得他对你的真心,那个拥有了你就可以背弃人生的男人,7年之后再次相遇,我才明白,如果我再坚持一天,哪怕一个小时,我们也不会沦落至此。苏墨痕,你愿意娶我么?
  • 地奇

    地奇

    猎地之奇妙,赏自然之壮丽!四大国度为争夺大地之心岩溶心核展开了一场气势恢宏的自然之战!