登陆注册
20335500000023

第23章

She shut her novel upon her thumb, that she might have nothing to do but admire Grace's courage, as the girl walked away.

"It will do her good, poor thing," said the elder woman. "She looks wretchedly."

"I can understand just why she does it," murmured Miss Gleason in adoring rapture.

"I hope she does it for pleasure," said Mrs. Alger.

"It is n't that," returned Miss Gleason mysteriously.

"At any rate, Mr. Libby seemed pleased."

"Oh, she would never marry HIM!" said Miss Gleason.

The other laughed, and at that moment Grace also laughed. The strong~current of her purpose, the sense of escape from the bitter servitude of the past week, and the wild hope of final expiation through the chances she was tempting gave her a buoyancy long unfelt. She laughed in gayety of heart as she helped the young man draw his dory down the sand, and then took her place at one end while he gave it the last push and then leaped in at the other. He pulled out to where the boat lay tilting at anchor, and held the dory alongside by the gunwale that she might step aboard. But after rising she faltered, looking intently at the boat as if she missed something there.

"I thought you had a man to sail your boat"

"I had. But I let him go last week. Perhaps I ought to have told you," he said, looking up at her aslant. "Are you afraid to trust my seamanship? Adams was a mere form. He behaved like a fool that day."

"Oh, I'm not afraid," said Grace. She stepped from the dory into the boat, and he flung out the dory's anchor and followed. The sail went up with a pleasant clucking of the tackle, and the light wind filled it.

Libby made the sheet fast, and, sitting down in the stern on the other side, took the tiller and headed the boat toward the town that shimmered in the distance. The water hissed at the bow, and seethed and sparkled from the stern; the land breeze that bent their sail blew cool upon her cheek and freshened it with a tinge of color.

"This will do you good," he said, looking into hers with his kind, gay eyes.

The color in her cheeks deepened a little. "Oh, I am better than I look.

I did n't come for"--"For medicinal purposes. Well, I am glad of it. We've a good hour between us and news or no news from Maynard, and I should like to think we were out for pleasure. You don't object?"

"No. You can even smoke, if that will heighten the illusion."

"It will make it reality. But you don't mean it?"

"Yes; why not?"

"I don't know. But I could n't have dreamt of smoking in your presence.

And we take the liberty to dream very strange things."

"Yes," she said, "it's shocking what things we do dream of people. But am I so forbidding?" she asked, a little sadly.

"Not now," said Libby. He got out a pouch of tobacco and some cigarette papers, and putting the tiller under his arm, he made himself a cigarette.

"You seem interested," he said, as he lifted his eyes from his work, on which he found her intent, and struck his fusee.

"I was admiring your skill," she answered.

"Do you think it was worth a voyage to South America?"

"I shouldn't have thought the voyage was necessary."

"Oh, perhaps you think you can do it," he said, handing her the tobacco and papers. She took them and made a cigarette. "It took me a whole day to learn to make bad ones, and this, is beautiful. But I will never smoke it. I will keep this always."

"You had better smoke it, if you want more," she said.

"Will you make some more? I can't smoke the first one!"

"Then smoke the last," she said, offering him the things back.

"No, go on. I'll smoke it."

She lent herself to the idle humor of the time, and went on making cigarettes till there were no more papers. From time to time she looked up from this labor, and scanned the beautiful bay, which they had almost wholly to themselves. They passed a collier lagging in the deep channel, and signalling for a pilot to take her up to the town. A yacht, trim and swift, cut across their course; the ladies on board waved a salutation with their handkerchiefs, and Libby responded.

"Do you know them?" asked Grace.

"No!" he laughed. "But ladies like to take these liberties at a safe distance."

"Yes, that's a specimen of woman's daring," she said, with a self-scornful curl of the lip, which presently softened into a wistful smile.

"How lovely it all is!" she sighed.

"Yes, there's nothing better in all the world than a sail. It is all the world while it lasts. A boat's like your own fireside for snugness."

A dreamier light came into her eye, which wandered, with a turn of the head giving him the tender curve of her cheek, over the levels of the bay, roughened everywhere by the breeze, but yellowish green in the channels and dark with the thick growth of eel-grass in the shallows; then she lifted her face to the pale blue heavens in an effort that slanted towards him the soft round of her chin, and showed her full throat.

"This is the kind of afternoon," she said, still looking at the sky, "that you think will never end."

"I wish it would n't," he answered.

She lowered her eyes to his, and asked: "Do you have times when you are sorry that you ever tried to do anything--when it seems foolish to have tried?"

"I have the other kind of times,--when I wish that I had tried to do something."

"Oh yes, I have those, too. It's wholesome to be ashamed of not having tried to do anything; but to be ashamed of having tried--it's like death.

There seems no recovery from that."

He did not take advantage of her confession, or try to tempt her to further confidence; and women like men who have this wisdom, or this instinctive generosity, and trust them further.

"And the worst of it is that you can't go back and be like those that have never tried at all. If you could, that would be some consolation for having failed. There is nothing left of you but your mistake."

"Well," he said, "some people are not even mistakes. I suppose that almost any sort of success looks a good deal like failure from the inside. It must be a poor creature that comes up to his own mark. The best way is not to have any mark, and then you're in no danger of not coming up to it." He laughed, but she smiled sadly.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 新科神的养成系统

    新科神的养成系统

    一个得到系统的少年(雾)的与美少女们成长史
  • 穿越后周

    穿越后周

    以柴荣为首的24男、16女、1儿童为了逃世界末日,不料穿越到了五代十国!他们努力改善自己的生存环境,同时帮助周边的百姓摆脱贫困,企图改变历史轨迹,实现大华夏之梦,打破“崖山之后无中国,明亡之后无华夏”的魔咒。他们用现代的智慧与谋略,重塑了整个五代十国!
  • 独行孤天

    独行孤天

    天地谁人判我?风云为我起舞?笑谈世间情仇!生死于我何干?吾问心无愧!不怕世人猖狂!我自凌云轻狂!吟我命随天,由己不由天!吾名独孤潇,潇洒一生一世,谁人可欺我?为我吟歌者,独行九天!欺我无能者,诛杀灭族!
  • 轮回不孤单之心城留你

    轮回不孤单之心城留你

    一世,他们种下情种,自此世世轮回。相遇,又分离。但他们的命运始终相连,逃脱不出彼此的心城。他为了她,说过:谁敢阻挠我们在一起,本尊遇神杀神,遇魔杀魔,就算为了你逆了这片天又如何?他为了她,放弃他拥有的一切,只为生生世世守护她。每一次轮回,每一次相遇。每一丝回忆,他和她都铭记。
  • 当初我爱你:男神请管好

    当初我爱你:男神请管好

    小时候,他看起来天真无邪,但是只有甜心知道,他不过是装的,他曾害她掉如河中,她恨他入骨,却不知是如何心动的。大学毕业,她都在陪他装。终于一天,她承认爱上了他,他却失忆逃走了,回来时还装清纯。甜心:“我认识你吗?”某人也装。段亦景:“我也不认识你……”甜心:“……”段亦景:“我认识的是当初那个蠢萌的女孩。”段亦景:“现在进阶成蠢萌女人了。”说完,便俯下身,亲亲凉凉的唇覆盖……
  • 天使出售中

    天使出售中

    她回眸一笑百媚生,多少男生为之倾倒,可她却偏偏恋上了不该恋上的那个人,伤透了不该伤透的心。在她最痛快与无助的时候,他的出现,仿佛是她生命中的曙光。他为她全心全力的付出打动了她,却败给了社会舆论的攻击。看着他的力不从心,她选择含泪退出,微笑着看着他的世界,和自己渐行渐远。在国外的几年岁月了,他拼命寻找她的足迹,想告诉她,我可以为了你,和这个世界为敌。却一次次的擦肩而过,各奔东西。泪流尽了,心伤完了,她回到曾经的城市,恍然发现,其实那个他,从未走远。可是她仍旧不敢靠近,怕历史重新上演。他冷笑,“你以为我的世界是你想进就进,想出就出的吗?”美人别跑,朕看上你了,要封你为后。
  • 我的奇异校友

    我的奇异校友

    杀手?另类?一次误打误撞,看见了一场目睹了一场凶杀案。从此,封陨的生活不再平凡,一切的一切接踵而来………
  • 暗黑之毁灭

    暗黑之毁灭

    姓名:凌可性别:男爱好:女武器:匕首技能:正在纠结中...
  • 异界大乱斗

    异界大乱斗

    "爹,我不要练剑,我要当灵师!"灵力觉醒是人生最重的一道关卡。一旦顺利通过,那么注定了将来的人生不会平凡。因为这代表从此以后可以修炼灵力,最不济也会成为让人们敬仰的灵师。如果机遇不错,一跃可进阶成为灵宗。不仅是实力,地位也不可同日而语。这本书讲述的就是凌雨哲在灵师界不灭的传说……
  • 李银河说性

    李银河说性

    本书是李银河关于“性”话题的经典作品的自选合辑,代表了李银河作为性学专家的几乎全部主要观点。作者试图在与性学有关的问题上传播一种冷静,客观,理性和正确的观察角度和理念,期望人们能够改变一些错误的性观念。从而提高生活的质量,享受到快乐的人生。