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第9部分

beasts and superbeasts-第9部分

小说: beasts and superbeasts 字数: 每页4000字

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haste and moved appreciably nearer the fireplace。



〃Was this in the SUB…ROSA'S strong…box?〃 she asked。



〃Oh no;〃 said Vasco carelessly; 〃that is a list of 

the well…known people who would be involved in a very 

disagreeable scandal if the SUB…ROSA'S papers were made 

public。  I've put you at the head of it; otherwise it 

follows alphabetical order。〃



The Duchess gazed helplessly at the string of names; 

which seemed for the moment to include nearly every one 

she knew。  As a matter of fact; her own name at the head 

of the list exercised an almost paralysing effect on her 

thinking faculties。



〃Of course you have destroyed the papers?〃 she 

asked; when she had somewhat recovered herself。  She was 

conscious that she made the remark with an entire lack of 

conviction。



Vasco shook his head。



〃But you should have;〃 said Lulu angrily; 〃if; as 

you say; they are highly compromising … 〃



〃Oh; they are; I assure you of that;〃 interposed the 

young man。



〃Then you should put them out of harm's way at once。  

Supposing anything should leak out; think of all these 

poor; unfortunate people who would be involved in the 

disclosures;〃 and Lulu tapped the list with an agitated 

gesture。



〃Unfortunate; perhaps; but not poor;〃 corrected 

Vasco; 〃if you read the list carefully you'll notice that 

I haven't troubled to include anyone whose financial 

standing isn't above question。〃



Lulu glared at her nephew for some moments in 

silence。  Then she asked hoarsely: 〃What are you going to 

do?〃



〃Nothing … for the remainder of my life;〃 he 

answered meaningly。  〃A little hunting; perhaps;〃 he 

continued; 〃and I shall have a villa at Florence。  The 

Villa Sub…Rosa would sound rather quaint and picturesque; 

don't you think; and quite a lot of people would be able 

to attach a meaning to the name。  And I suppose I must 

have a hobby; I shall probably collect Raeburns。〃



Lulu's relative; who lived at the Court of Monaco; 

got quite a snappish answer when she wrote recommending 

some further invention in the realm of marine research。





THE COBWEB





THE farmhouse kitchen probably stood where it did as 

a matter of accident or haphazard choice; yet its 

situation might have been planned by a master…strategist 

in farmhouse architecture。  Dairy and poultry…yard; and 

herb garden; and all the busy places of the farm seemed 

to lead by easy access into its wide flagged haven; where 

there was room for everything and where muddy boots left 

traces that were easily swept away。  And yet; for all 

that it stood so well in the centre of human bustle; its 

long; latticed window; with the wide window…seat; built 

into an embrasure beyond the huge fireplace; looked out 

on a wild spreading view of hill and heather and wooded 

combe。  The window nook made almost a little room in 

itself; quite the pleasantest room in the farm as far as 

situation and capabilities went。  Young Mrs。 Ladbruk; 

whose husband had just come into the farm by way of 

inheritance; cast covetous eyes on this snug corner; and 

her fingers itched to make it bright and cosy with chintz 

curtains and bowls of flowers; and a shelf or two of old 

china。  The musty farm parlour; looking out on to a prim; 

cheerless garden imprisoned within high; blank walls; was 

not a room that lent itself readily either to comfort or 

decoration。



〃When we are more settled I shall work wonders in 

the way of making the kitchen habitable;〃 said the young 

woman to her occasional visitors。  There was an unspoken 

wish in those words; a wish which was unconfessed as well 

as unspoken。  Emma Ladbruk was the mistress of the farm; 

jointly with her husband she might have her say; and to a 

certain extent her way; in ordering its affairs。  But she 

was not mistress of the kitchen。



On one of the shelves of an old dresser; in company 

with chipped sauce…boats; pewter jugs; cheese…graters; 

and paid bills; rested a worn and ragged Bible; on whose 

front page was the record; in faded ink; of a baptism 

dated ninety…four years ago。 〃Martha Crale〃 was the name 

written on that yellow page。  The yellow; wrinkled old 

dame who hobbled and muttered about the kitchen; looking 

like a dead autumn leaf which the winter winds still 

pushed hither and thither; had once been Martha Crale; 

for seventy odd years she had been Martha Mountjoy。  For 

longer than anyone could remember she had pattered to and 

fro between oven and wash…house and dairy; and out to 

chicken…run and garden; grumbling and muttering and 

scolding; but working unceasingly。  Emma Ladbruk; of 

whose coming she took as little notice as she would of a 

bee wandering in at a window on a summer's day; used at 

first to watch her with a kind of frightened curiosity。  

She was so old and so much a part of the place; it was 

difficult to think of her exactly as a living thing。  Old 

Shep; the white…nozzled; stiff…limbed collie; waiting for 

his time to die; seemed almost more human than the 

withered; dried…up old woman。  He had been a riotous; 

roystering puppy; mad with the joy of life; when she was 

already a tottering; hobbling dame; now he was just a 

blind; breathing carcase; nothing more; and she still 

worked with frail energy; still swept and baked and 

washed; fetched and carried。  If there were something in 

these wise old dogs that did not perish utterly with 

death; Emma used to think to herself; what generations of 

ghost…dogs there must be out on those hills; that Martha 

had reared and fed and tended and spoken a last goodbye 

word to in that old kitchen。  And what memories she must 

have of human generations that had passed away in her 

time。  It was difficult for anyone; let alone a stranger 

like Emma; to get her to talk of the days that had been; 

her shrill; quavering speech was of doors that had been 

left unfastened; pails that had got mislaid; calves whose 

feeding…time was overdue; and the various little faults 

and lapses that chequer a farmhouse routine。  Now and 

again; when election time came round; she would unstore 

her recollections of the old names round which the fight 

had waged in the days gone by。  There had been a 

Palmerston; that had been a name down Tiverton way; 

Tiverton was not a far journey as the crow flies; but to 

Martha it was almost a foreign country。  Later there had 

been Northcotes and Aclands; and many other newer names 

that she had forgotten; the names changed; but it was 

always Libruls and Toories; Yellows and Blues。  And they 

always quarrelled and shouted as to who was right and who 

was wrong。  The one they quarrelled about most was a fine 

old gentleman with an angry face … she had seen his 

picture on the walls。  She had seen it on the floor too; 

with a rotten apple squashed over it; for the farm had 

changed its politics from time to time。  Martha had never 

been on one side or the other; none of 〃they〃 had ever 

done the farm a stroke of good。  Such was her sweeping 

verdict; given with all a peasant's distrust of the 

outside world。



When the half…frightened curiosity had somewhat 

faded away; Emma Ladbruk was uncomfortably conscious of 

another feeling towards the old woman。  She was a quaint 

old tradition; lingering about the place; she was part 

and parcel of the farm itself; she was something at once 

pathetic and picturesque … but she was dreadfully in the 

way。  Emma had come to the farm full of plans for little 

reforms and improvements; in part the result of training 

in the newest ways and methods; in part the outcome of 

her own ideas and fancies。  Reforms in the kitchen 

region; if those deaf old ears could have been induced to 

give them even a hearing; would have met with short 

shrift and scornful rejection; and the kitchen region 

spread over the zone of dairy and market business and 

half the work of the household。  Emma; with the latest 

science of dead…poultry dressing at her finger…tips; sat 

by; an unheeded watcher; while old Martha trussed the 

chickens for the market…stall as she had trussed them for 

nearly four…score years … all leg and no breast。  And the 

hundred hints anent effective cleaning and labour…

lightening and the things that make for wholesomeness 

which the young woman was ready to impart or to put into 

action dropped away into nothingness before that wan; 

muttering; unheeding presence。  Above all; the coveted 

window corner; that was to be a dainty; cheerful oasis in 

the gaunt old kitchen; stood now choked and lumbered with 

a litter of odds and ends that Emma; for all her nominal 

authority; would not have dared or cared to displace; 

over them seemed to be spun the protection of something 

that was like a human cobweb。  Decidedly Martha was in 

the way。  It would have been an unworthy meanness to have 

wished to see the span of th

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