登陆注册
37836100000047

第47章 XX.(2)

We ha'n't bound to stay in Florence," said Mrs. Lander, thoughtfully.

"I only took the rooms by the week, and we can go, any time, Clementina, if you are uncomf'table bein' here on Miss Milray's account. We could go to Rome; they say Rome's a nice place; or to Egypt."

Mrs. Milray's in Egypt," Clementina suggested.

That's true," Mrs. Lander admitted, with a sigh. After a while she went on, "I don't know as we've got any right to keep the letter. It belongs to her, don't it?"

"I guess it belongs to me, as much as it does to her," said Clementina.

"If it's to her, it's for me. I am not going to send it, Mrs. Landa."

They were still in this conclusion when early in the following afternoon Miss Milray's cards were brought up for Mrs. Lander and Miss Claxon.

"Well, I decla'e!" cried Mrs. Lander. "That docta: must have gone straight and told her what we said."

"He had no right to," said Clementina, but neither of them was displeased, and after it was over, Mrs. Lander said that any one would have thought the call was for her, instead of Clementina, from the way Miss Milray kept talking to her. She formed a high opinion of her; and Miss Milray put Clementina in mind of Mr. Milray; she had the same hair of chiseled silver, and the same smile; she moved like him, and talked like him; but with a greater liveliness. She asked fondly after him, and made Clementina tell her if he seemed quite well, and in good spirits; she was civilly interested in Mrs. Milray's health. At the embarrassment which showed itself in the girl, she laughed and said, "Don't imagine I don't know all about it, Miss Claxon! My sister-in-law has owned up very handsomely; she isn't half bad, as the English say, and I think she likes owning up if she can do it safely."

"And you don't think," asked Mrs. Lander, "that Clementina done wrong to dance that way?"

Clementina blushed, and Miss Milray laughed again. "If you'll let Miss Claxon come to a little party I'm giving she may do her dance at my house; but she sha'n't be obliged to do it, or anything she doesn't like.

Don't say she hasn't a gown ready, or something of that kind! You don't know the resources of Florence, and how the dress makers here doat upon doing impossible things in no time at all, and being ready before they promise. If you'll put Miss Claxon in my hands, I'll see that she's dressed for my dance. I live out on one of the hills over there, that you see from your windows"--she nodded toward them--"in a beautiful villa, too cold for winter, and too hot for summer, but I think Miss Claxon can endure its discomfort for a day, if you can spare her, and she will consent to leave you to the tender mercies of your maid, and "Miss Milray paused at the kind of unresponsive blank to which she found herself talking, and put up her lorgnette, to glance from Mrs. Lander to Clementina. The girl said, with embarrassment, "I don't think I ought to leave Mrs. 1anda, just now. She isn't very well, and I shouldn't like to leave her alone."

"But we're just as much obliged to you as if she could come," Mrs. Lander interrupted; I and later on, maybe she can. You see, we han't got any maid, yit. Well, we did have one at Woodlake, but she made us do so many things for her, that we thought we should like to do a few things for ouaselves, awhile."

If Miss Milray perhaps did not conceive the situation, exactly, she said, Oh, they were quite right in that; but she might count upon Miss Claxon for her dance, might not she; and might not she do anything in her power for them? She rose to go, but Mrs. Lander took her at her word, so far as to say, Why, yes, if she could tell Clementina the best place to get a dress she guessed the child would be glad enough to come to the dance.

"Tell her!" Miss Milray cried. "I'll take her! Put on your hat, my dear," she said to Clementina, "and come with me now. My carriage is at your door."

Clementina looked at Mrs. Lander, who said, "Go, of cou'se, child. I wish I could go, too."

"Do come, too," Miss Milray entreated.

"No, no," said Mrs. Lander, flattered. "I a'n't feeling very well, to-day. I guess I'm better off at home. But don't you hurry back on my account, Clementina." While the girl was gone to put on her hat she talked on about her. "She's the best gul in the wo'ld, and she won't be one of the poorest; and I shall feel that I'm doin' just what Mr. Landa would have wanted I should. He picked her out himself, moa than three yea's ago, when we was drivin' past her house at Middlemount, and it was to humor him afta he was gone, moa than anything else, that I took her.

Well, she wa'n't so very easy to git, either, I can tell you." She cut short her history of the affair to say when Clementina came back, "I want you should do the odderin' yourself, Miss Milray, and not let her scrimp with the money. She wants to git some visitin' cahds; and if you miss anything about her that she'd ought to have, or that any otha yong lady's got, won't you just git it for her?"

As soon as she imagined the case, Miss Milray set herself to overcome Mrs. Lander's reluctance from a maid. She prevailed with her to try the Italian woman whom she sent her, and in a day the genial Maddalena had effaced the whole tradition of the bleak Ellida. It was not essential to the understanding which instantly established itself between them that they should have any language in common. They babbled at each other, Mrs. Lander in her Bostonized Yankee, and Maddalena in her gutteral Florentine, and Mrs. Lander was flattered to find how well she knew Italian.

Miss Milray had begun being nice to Clementina in fealty to her brother, who so seldom made any proof of her devotion to him, and to whom she bad remained passionately true through his shady past. She was eager to humor his whim for the little country girl who had taken his fancy, because it was his whim, and not because she had any hopes that Clementina would justify it. She had made Dr. Welwright tell her all he knew about her, and his report of her grace and beauty had piqued her curiosity; his account of the forlorn dullness of her life with Mrs.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 挽纱以泪,潇湘以情

    挽纱以泪,潇湘以情

    雪国三公主远嫁火焰国,大将军潇湘负责迎接。大雨停留,琴瑟和鸣。。郎有情,女有意,跨不过界限。挽纱献身,将军冷心,誓死不违背自己的君主,皇宫待命,出征雪国,红帐中挽纱惨遭凌辱,一把匕首誓死捍卫。雪国万民陷入水深火热,挽纱不知。红颜多薄命,铁骑而归,只为最爱。红颜祸水,终为一个情字.....
  • 大小姐的极品兵王

    大小姐的极品兵王

    只因一个诺言,兵王之王不得不留在都市里,用其一生,去守护那个诺言中的那个人。
  • 淡定王妃腹黑爷

    淡定王妃腹黑爷

    一朝醒来发现,破旧的房子,老实爹,软弱娘,还有一个调皮弟弟,文静的妹妹。还有个一哭就让人心碎的小正太叫自己娘亲。因为被亲戚陷害所以未婚生子,因此村里都不待见,最后被自家极品亲戚逼迫,只能搬到远离村子的山脚下。突然有一天,意外救了一男子,却好心没好报要跟我抢孩子。男子:“乖,叫声爹,给你买很多很多糖。”小正太:“哼,拿糖就想哄我,你以为我还是三五岁的小孩吗?”暗卫集体晕倒:小主子,难道你不是五岁小孩吗?男子:“叫我爹,教你武功,就像我这么厉害。”小正太:“我是有骨气的人,不会被你贿赂。”……男子:“叫爹,银票全给你。”小正太眼睛在银票上滴溜溜的转:“叫爹先给银票,说话要算数。”众暗卫:小主子,说好的节操呢?骨气呢?男人得意的笑,只要能贿赂就成,银子他不缺:“绝对说话算数。”说完将银票递给小正太。回过头,小正太乖巧的跑到女子身边:“娘亲娘亲,我在路边捡到了好多银票。”众暗卫:腹黑,狡猾,确定了,是主子亲生的。男子:“臭小子,又耍你爹。”打又打不得,骂又骂不得,谁让这是自己亲生的。
  • 时代新兵

    时代新兵

    在已知的银河系相邻滴宇宙中有着一个铯钡镧铪系
  • 掌控龙神

    掌控龙神

    从反洪荒时代龙族的辉煌,神龙所过万兽退避
  • 偏执枭王:殿下,你是我的

    偏执枭王:殿下,你是我的

    男主:你注定是我的。女主:你想多了。男主:是么?女主瞥了眼周围缓缓靠近来的灵魂锁链,艰难的吞咽了口气:呵呵,呵呵,我开玩笑的......你先,放开我可好?男主:不好。女主因印道机缘显灵宙宇,觉醒之后,不自知的追随着阳谋一步步打怪,升级,直到站在世界的顶端,又如阳谋所愿的迈进了新地图。却......自以为对阳谋知之甚详而寻乐子般跟着阳谋走的女主傻眼了。“泥煤啊!这是个阴谋!!”印道机缘,让他发现了她。自此追逐,生死不弃。
  • 天神之体

    天神之体

    叶天,天玄大陆史上第一废物,却拥有整个宇宙唯一的天神之体!在他师傅韩雪吟的指导下,最终改变了他废物的命运,踏上了成神的道路!阴玄、阳玄、地王、天王、天尊、武尊、帝尊、神
  • 西游记之定海神针

    西游记之定海神针

    孤儿齐小悟做兼职意外被东西东西砸到,没想到竟是传说中的定海神针化身定如意女子,不仅出现在齐小悟的生活中,还将给他带来什么样的故事呢?
  • 执局

    执局

    面临亡国之祸的南朝于列强环伺之下,慕雪行迎刃而上力挽南朝之危,混入靖北城则是计划第一步。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!